Tales of Wayward Girls and Immoral Women: Case Records and the Professionalization of Social WorkUniversity of Illinois Press, 1998 - 260 עמודים Writing case records was central to the professionalization of social work, a task that by its very nature "created clients, authorities, problems, and solutions." In Tales of Wayward Girls and Immoral Women, Karen W. Tice argues that when early social workers wrote about their clients they transformed individual biographies into professional representations. Because the social workers were attuned to the intricacies of language, case records became focal points for debates on science, art, representation, objectivity, realism, and gender in public charity and reform. Tice uses 150 case records of early practitioners from a number of reform organizations and considers myriad books on the specifics of case recording to analyze the competing models of record-keeping, both in the field and outside it. "An original and important study, this is the first major work I know of to carry out a contextual analysis of case records and to discuss the role case records have played in the development of social work." -- Leslie Leighninger, author of Social Work, Social Welfare, and American Society |
תוכן
Ill Be Watching You The Advent of the Case Record | 17 |
Case Records and Professional Legitimation | 47 |
The Rescue of Juvenile Fragments The Case of Hazel | 78 |
To Make a Case Tales of Detection | 98 |
Tales of Protection Personal Appeals and Professional Friendship | 129 |
Tales of Accomplishment Social Work and the Art of Public Persuasion | 160 |
Afterword | 189 |
Case Inventory | 199 |
Notes | 201 |
Bibliography | 227 |
249 | |
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
agencies agent annual report argued Associated Charities authority BCAS benevolent boarding mother Boston Children's Aid case-recording Champine's Charities and Correction charity organization society Chicago child guidance child-placing Children's Aid Society cial clients clinical Cruelty to Children delinquent diagnostic documentation early social example facts Family Welfare Association Frank Bruno gender genre girls Hazel Helen human interest immoral interpretation investigation KALLIKAK FAMILY knowledge Kunzel Leighninger lives Mary Richmond Massachusetts Society methods middle-class Minneapolis Family Welfare Miss Champine moral MSPCC narrated narrative National Conference noted observed organization society movement Pittsburgh Survey poor Prevention of Cruelty problems profes profession psychiatric record-keeping records reform relationships relief Routzahn Russell Sage Foundation Salvation Army scientific charity sexual slums social casework social evidence social work leaders social work practice social workers sociologists Sophonisba Breckinridge stories survey textual tion urban exploration visiting teacher visitor wayward Wenocur and Reisch woman women work's writing wrote
קטעים בולטים
עמוד 13 - ... if you want to understand what a science is, you should look in the first instance not at its theories or its findings, and certainly not at what its apologists say about it; you should look at what the practitioners of it do.