z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Discourse Analysis in Critical Social Work: From Apology to Question
Author(s) -
Amy Rossiter
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
critical social work
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1543-9372
DOI - 10.22329/csw.v6i1.5654
Subject(s) - epistemology , sociology , critical consciousness , context (archaeology) , critical reflection , set (abstract data type) , social practice , reflection (computer programming) , relation (database) , critical discourse analysis , politics , political science , pedagogy , ideology , computer science , law , art , paleontology , philosophy , database , performance art , art history , biology , programming language
This paper concerns the relation between critical reflective practice and social workers’ lived experience of the complicated and contradictory world of practice. I will outline how critical reflection based on discourse analysis may generate useful perspectives for practitioners who struggle to make sense of the gap between critical aspirations and practice realities, and who often mediate that gap as a sense of personal failure. I will describe two examples of discourse-based case studies, and show how the conceptual space that is opened by such reflection can help social workers gain a necessary distance from the complexity of their ambivalently constructed place. Discourse analysis can provide new vantage points from which to reconstruct practice theory in ways that are more consciously oriented to our social justice commitments. I understand these vantage points in the case studies I will describe as: 1) an historical consciousness, 2) access to understanding what is left out of discourses in use, 3) understanding of how actors are positioned in discourse, all leading to: 4) a new set of questions which expose the gap between the construction of practice possibilities and social justice values, thus allowing for a new understanding of the limitations, constraints and possibilities within the context of the practice problem.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here