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This book examines research using anti-oppressive, arts-based
methods to promote social change in oppressed and marginalized
communities. The contributors discuss literary techniques,
performance, visual art, and new media in relation to the
co-construction of knowledge and positionality, reflexivity, data
representation, community building and engagement, and pedagogy.
The contributors to this volume hail from a wide array of
disciplines, including sociology, social work, community
psychology, anthropology, performing arts, education, medicine, and
public health.
Pansexuality: A Panopoly of Co-Constructed Narratives expertly
weaves contemporary research on sexual and gender identity with
personal narratives of individuals who have navigated social norms
and constructs to carve out an understanding of their own
sexuality. The text provides readers with an innovative and
intimate lens through which they can begin to understand the
dynamic nature of sexuality. The text begins by providing readers
with theoretical and historical context regarding nonbinary
sexualities. The following chapters outline the methodologies the
author used to support and generate new research on
pansexuality-including one-on-one interviews, collage, transcript
poetry, and a qualitative survey-and the results of that research.
Eleven chapters highlight the personal stories of individuals who
identify as pansexual and other nonbinary sexualities, summarizing
important experiences, defining moments, the meanings they attach
to sexuality and gender, and observations they have made over the
years, testimony gleaned from the author's interviews with them.
Embodying modern research that explores the fluidity of gender and
sexual identity, Pansexuality is an illuminating text that is well
suited for courses in gender studies, human sexuality, and
sociology.
Anti-Oppressive Social Work Practice: Putting Theory into Action
applies anti-oppressive theories and concepts to a generalist
social work practice model to provide students with tools to
develop a critically evaluative and self-reflective social work
practice. The text combines social welfare history, theory, skills
and concrete examples of anti-oppressive practice in real-world
settings to help students develop a personal practice that is
grounded in an understanding of social justice and the need for
social workers to interrogate their work and the institutions that
they find themselves working in. Opening chapters address social
justice, values and ethics, and theory, and challenge students to
critically examine their own social positions, identities, and
values. Later chapters present fields of social work and social
justice practice, from micro through macro, historical and
ideological contexts, and a variety of skills and forms of
practice. Within each chapter, Stories from the Field provide
students with reflections from practitioners and participants on
anti-oppressive practice and social justice work, highlighting
personal successes and challenges. The second edition includes new
material on environmental and ecological justice, the ethics of
care, feminist theoretical approaches, the non-profit industrial
complex and other contemporary topics. This edition also
incorporates additional Stories from the Field, an expanded section
on tools and approaches to family work, as well as additional
supplemental films, readings, and organizational resources.
Anti-Oppressive Social Work Practice is an ideal text for
foundational courses in social work that approach multi-level
practice from a decolonizing perspective.
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