BJSW Advance Access first published online on July 25, 2006
This version published online on July 31, 2006
British Journal of Social Work, doi:10.1093/bjsw/bcl078
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1 Professor of Social Work at the University of Newcastle in New South Wales, Australia and co-editor of Australian Social Work
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. This paper locates the social work literature on spirituality within the broad theoretical and epistemological perspectives of late modernity. It focuses particularly on the rise of individualism and its culmination in the theory of reflexive modernization--life politics and subpolitics--and makes an appeal for an ecospiritual social work--one which would take social work away from individualism back to its communitarian roots. The rise of spirituality in social work is linked to individualism. Both result from the depersonalizing and alienating effects of modernity: the detraditionalization and secularization of society; the rise of science, rationality, the professions, and industrial and technological progress; and the decline in religion. Social work mirrors this process in that it has worked vigorously to shake off its religious, moralistic beginnings, and to embrace the secular trappings of professionalism in the process increasingly embracing highly individualistic values and scientific explanations of reality. The literature on spirituality in social work, in which the influence of New Age spirituality is strongly evident, tries to re-instantiate our search for quality and meaning. However, social work has yet to examine broader sociological theory and the way in which it can deepen our understanding of the rise of spirituality in social work. A mistake in the author biography has been corrected in this version.
Article
Viewing Spirituality in Social Work through the Lens of Contemporary Social Theory
Mel Gray 1 *
Mel Gray, E-mail: Mel.Gray{at}newcastle.edu.au
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