Under the Cover of Kindness: The Invention of Social WorkIn Under the Cover of Kindness, Leslie Margolin looks at how this country's social welfare system developed and with what results. From his detailed examination of social work texts, primarily case histories, he argues persuasively that social work disguises its own assumptions and claims to power as a way of further legitimizing its actions. By attending to these case histories, Margolin shows how social work entails not only the intrusion into the previously private space of the home but also the constant justification of this intervention - to both clients and workers themselves - as representing charitable and disinterested help. This book critically assesses how social workers invent themselves as they simultaneously invent their field of knowledge. |
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A Network of Writing 4. Self - Mystification 60 85 PART 2 : AGGRESSIVE SOCIAL WORK 5. Reaching the Hard - to - Reach 6. Framing the Poor 7. Lobotomy 97 106 PART 3 : EMPOWERING SOCIAL WORK 8. The Rhetoric of Empowerment 117 9.
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