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- W4255197353 abstract "AbstractMartin Smith’s article uses Shakespeare’s Macbeth and its visual imagery as a means to discuss social work practice, supervision and research. The article concludes that Macbeth might offer something distinctive to busy, hard pressed social workers by opening out a capacity for empathic connection (also explored by Malone in this issue). Smith argues that there is a value to be gained from developing, honing and making explicit the use of imagery in social work, which can help practitioners to reach ‘beneath the surface’. This enables social workers to render ‘visible’ the affective qualities of social work. He shows how Macbeth is rich in visual metaphor through which Shakespeare finds a figurative language for otherwise inexpressible emotion.Turning to social work processes he discusses the ubiquity of risk assessment and the complex temporalities at play in social work, in which practitioners must often generate understandings quickly in the here and now, whilst also orienting themselves towards future possibilities that can’t be known or predicted (Gunaratnam 2015). The paper suggests that, rather than being a distraction, the full use of visual sensibility and language which is rich with imagery might allow a fuller truth about social work to emerge. Shakespeare’s use of visual language in drama augments the scene on the stage with a scene in the mind offering a window onto the emotional world of the characters that far exceeds their ‘actions’. In the discussion of visual matrix methodology later in this issue Liveng et al show how ‘a scenic register of experience’ conveys a particular depth and complexity of emotion. In social work practice a visual or scenic sensibility may allow unconscious aspects of experience to come to the surface (Roy 2017). Working with the imagery embedded in language therefore offers a means by which the unconscious dynamics of practice might become better available for thought and communication in practice, supervision and research (Froggett & Briggs 2012)." @default.
- W4255197353 created "2022-05-12" @default.
- W4255197353 date "2017-04-03" @default.
- W4255197353 modified "2023-09-30" @default.
- W4255197353 title "Martin Smith" @default.
- W4255197353 doi "https://doi.org/10.1080/02650533.2017.1364463" @default.
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