1st Edition

What We See and What We Say Using Images in Research, Therapy, Empowerment, and Social Change

By Ephrat Huss Copyright 2013
    160 Pages 14 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    160 Pages 14 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Image-based research methods, such as arts-based research, can fill the absence of the voice of impoverished, under-privileged populations. In What We See and What We Say, Ephrat Huss argues that images are deep and universally psycho-neurological constructs through which people process their experiences. The theoretical model demonstrated in this book demonstrates that images can be used to enable three different levels of communication: with self, with others similar to oneself, and with others who differ in terms of culture and power. Dr. Huss centers her argument on a case study of impoverished Bedouin women’s groups in Israel who used art as self-expression, and includes many additional examples such as unemployed women and teenage girls in slums, women who have underwent sexual abuse, and the experiences of illegal immigrants. Ultimately, the author points to how the inherent structural characteristics of images help to intensify the voices of marginalized groups in research, therapy, empowerment, and social action.

    Introduction
    Section I: Background and Detailed Research Example
    Chapter 1: What We See and What We Say: The Use of Art in Research, Empowerment and Social Change
    Chapter 2: Creating Research, Researching Creations: Art-based Research and Marginalized Women
    Chapter 3: Case Study 1: Subjective Experience: “Daring to Use Gold Paint”—Narratives of Wishing and Dreaming
    Chapter 4: Case Study 2: “My Heart is the Only Think I Have Left”—Group Symbols of Resistance
    Chapter 5: Case Study 3: “Here I am in the Other Room saying ‘Yes,’ but I don’t Listen to Him—Images as Indirect Resistance and Communication with Power Holders
    Section II: Implications for Related Fields
    Chapter 6: Implications and Applications: The Missing Paradigm in Art Therapy
    Chapter 7: Implications and Applications: Arts-based Research through a Critical Lens
    Chapter 8: Implications and Applications for Arts as Social Change

    Biography

    Ephrat Huss, PhD, is an art therapist, a social worker, and a senior lecturer and founder of the Arts in Social Work Masters Specialization at the Charlotte B. and Jack J. Spirtzer Department of Social Work at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel.