BJSW Advance Access published online on November 13, 2007
British Journal of Social Work, doi:10.1093/bjsw/bcm124
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1 Senior Lecturer in the Department of Applied Social Science, University of Lancaster, Bowland North, Lancaster LA1 4YT, UK
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. How should we interpret the humanitarian narratives of early social work? This article suggests that we explore the ways in which bodies and detail were used to establish the grounds for humanitarian action in the late-Victorian period. Drawing on case material from a child welfare organization in Manchester and Salford, it explores how the filthy body of the child and the failings of worthless parents were used to justify interventions to rescue children from urban slums. Thus, progressivist and revisionist accounts of history are dispensed with in favour of a form of cultural history that recognizes the multifarious activities that comprise social work past and present and the fluidity of categorizations that are deployed in the practice of intervening in the flow of lives of the poor. This, it is argued, moves us beyond the tendency to focus on secondary sources relating to a few prominent organizations such as the Charity Organisation Society and the metropolis. Instead, emphasis is placed on the contribution of regional histories and localized, fine-grained empirical studies to broadening analytical approaches and deepening understanding of social work past and present.
Article
Humanitarian Narrative: Bodies and Detail in Late-Victorian Social Work
Carolyn Taylor 1 *
Carolyn Taylor, E-mail: c.p.taylor{at}lancaster.ac.uk
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