2019 Matthew Gibson-Pride and Shame in Child and Family Social Work.pdf

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PRIDE& SHAME
IN CHILD AND FAMILY
SOCIAL WORK
EMOTIONS AND THE SEARCH
FOR HUMANE PRACTICE
MATTHEW GIBSON
PRIDE AND SHAME IN CHILD
AND FAMILY SOCIAL WORK
Emotions
and the search for humane practice
Matthew Gibson
First published in Great Britain in 2019 by
Policy Press
University of Bristol
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© Policy Press 2019
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Contents
List of figures
Acknowledgements
one
Introduction
The relevance of pride and shame to professional practice
The study of pride and shame in professional practice
An outline of the research
How the data were collected
How the data were analysed
Limitations of the study
Chapter summaries
Conceptualising pride, shame, guilt, humiliation and
embarrassment
Foundations of emotion concepts
Basic emotions as a foundation for theories of pride and shame
Appraisals as a foundation for theories of pride and shame
Constructions as a foundation for theories of pride and shame
Defining pride, shame, guilt, humiliation and
embarrassment as constructions
Interoception
Sociocultural context
Self-concept
Social representations of self-conscious emotions
Embodied experiences of self-conscious emotions
A framework for a constructionist conception of the
self-conscious emotions
Content
Speech acts
Episode
Relationship
Experiencing self-conscious emotions
Summary
Pride and shame in the creation of child and family
social work
Theorising pride and shame in the professionalisation of
child and family social work
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two
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three
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Pride and shame in child and family social work
Pride and shame in the construction of professional
representations of practice
Social administration
Social policing
Activism
Therapy
Practical helper
Creating and maintaining child and family social work within
the bureaucratic field
Contemporary child and family social work
Re-evaluating the welfare state through the discourse of
neoliberalism
Reconstructing the boundaries of shame and pride through
the discourse of derision
Resisting the neoliberal re-conceptualisation of child and
family social work
Summary
four
Pride and shame in the creation of the ‘appropriate’
organisation
Part one: theorising pride and shame in the creation,
maintenance and disruption of child and family social
work services
Part two: a case example
Creating and maintaining an organisational identity
Disrupting and creating new professional identity claims
Disrupting and creating new public administration identity claims
Recreating the new service
Creating organisational emotional safety
The new child and family social work service
Summary
Pride and shame in the creation of the ‘appropriate’
professional
Part one: theorising pride and shame as mechanisms of
organisational control
Part two: a case example
Refashioning the organisational representation of the social
work role
Refashioning the characteristics of the organisational
representation
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