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Imagining Social Work: Assembling Inter- and Trans-Generational Visions of a Modern Project

dc.contributor.advisorZhou, Rachel
dc.contributor.authorWilson, Tina E.
dc.contributor.departmentSocial Worken_US
dc.date.accessioned2020-07-16T19:51:27Z
dc.date.available2020-07-16T19:51:27Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation is about the changing imaginations of academic social work in an increasingly entangled world. Broadly, my subject area is the history and philosophy of social work, with an emphasis on engagements with critical social theory. More specifically, my research explores questions of discipline, generation, and critical social theory in the Anglophone Canadian context as a means to better understand how shared perceptions of the possible and the desirable are “situated knowledges” (Haraway, 1988). To do so, I trace and theorize changing perceptions through a survey of educators, and through integrative interdisciplinary and philosophical knowledge work considering various dynamics of disciplines in general and social work in particular. Evoking my own generational standpoint, I raise as a collective disciplinary problematic the canonization of second generation critical social theories, and the need to engage in the collective work of disciplinary reflexivity on, and accountability to, the ways in which the conditions of existence and possibility of critical academic social work are changing over time. Methodologically, I elaborate a reparative historical practice through a slightly different genre or style of writing. This is a feminist strategy, one roughly within the (generational) turn towards showing what one combines and assembles and learns through engaging with the world as a means to invite further speculative and imaginative work. This strategy is also a means to begin to imagine a “post-expert,” “post-good” and “post-progress” social work, not because knowledge and intention do not matter, but because these organizing referents have each achieved a level of saturation in what they can produce in the world. As such, this dissertation contributes some of the conditions of intelligibility necessary for the collective work of imagining and reimagining something akin to justice or improvement through social work after the fall of so many left and liberal progress narratives.en_US
dc.description.degreeDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)en_US
dc.description.degreetypeDissertationen_US
dc.description.layabstractThis research explores changing understandings of how social work in the Canadian state context imagines and intervenes in the world. My focus is on academic social work as both educator and knowledge producer, because the university is where some ideas and practices are refined and reproduced so that they can in turn be shared more broadly. Findings include the noteworthy influence of the university on the ideas and initiatives that do gain traction, as well as a generational structural to perceptions of the possible and the desirable. Overall, this research contributes a range of resources—historical, theoretical, empirical and speculative—to the collective work of imagining and reimagining social work for a changing world.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11375/25534
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectSocial change; generational standpoints; history of social work; critical social theoryen_US
dc.titleImagining Social Work: Assembling Inter- and Trans-Generational Visions of a Modern Projecten_US
dc.typeThesisen_US

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