Sunday, November 21, 2010

Social Work/Culture Work: Shannon Jackson's talk at the UW SSW

A few thoughts on Shannon Jackson’s talk at UW School of Social Work, yesterday:


Shannon Jackson argues in her seminal work, Lines of Activity: Performance, Historiography, Hull House Domesticity that Culture Work and Social Work were intertwined to create a vehicle for social reform. She continues to argue that a variety of arts and crafts- performing, visual, as well as sports and play were employed to cultivate social cohesion and to “create a lived democracy” (Addams) and facilitate “…active learning” (Dewey). While potent in many respects (Hull House housed a pottery that generated a cottage industry for Mexican immigrants, generated musicians such as Benny Goodman, invented the play ground, educated 1000s of children in the delights of producing theatre)- she also argues that there was a great deal of complexity here at this juncture between social work and culture work. She argues that the need to struggle with issues of ethnic/racial identity and structural inequities are critical. She described the transformational processes that both the upper class, WASP Settlers of Hull House and its members experienced.

In her upcoming book, Social Works: Performing Art, Supporting Publics, she continues to explore how culture work is continuing to be employed again both as vehicles of social cohesion as well as to “unsettle narratives” of oppression and power. Like social work, she argues, culture work engages with complex institutions and questions social justice and offers several examples of how various art projects work to interrogate and transform institutions and to engage communities in crisis(such as post-Katrina New Orleans) in deep conversations. She asks that we allow space at the juncture between social work and culture work to generate the complex questions that arise here organically, whatever they may be.

While I appreciated Dr. Jackson’s presentation, I was left with many questions as a social work practitioner and teacher seeking to integrate culture work back into social work practice and pedagogy. What does this mean in an era dominated by “evidence based practice?” As Jackson acknowledges, art isn’t taken seriously in social work because it is “fluffy”, uncontrollable, immeasurable perhaps in regards to its efficacy as an “intervention.” I often find myself shy or apologetic when I describe my commitments to participatory music and dance as a liberatory, embodied, community-based praxis worthy of consideration in social work. I often feel like my explanations for why it is so important to me are met with silence- a silence I am not sure how to interpret.

The examples she offered during her talk from her forthcoming book struck me as fitting with what we think of as “community practice”, social action in social work terms. Meanwhile art, music and theatre therapy are evolving, -though in my poorly informed opinion marginalized- practices in relationship to what we think of as interpersonal practice.

It should be acknowledged that these conversations are happening slowly and quietly in our own School of Social Work at UW, as the post below describes. A number of us, including students and faculty are deeply committed to integrating a variety of art forms into our social work practice, research, and pedagogy. Examples include the conference Jackson spoke at yesterday, which was organized by Emily Conbere, an MSW student and playwright as well as the Seattle Fandango Project, which I have been a part of and is in fact funded in part by the School of Social Work. As we move ahead, these practices will require greater theorization, research, evaluation in order to be taken seriously in social work academe and intervention. In the meantime, we, like Jane Addams and John Dewey, know from experience that we are healing ourselves and facilitating opportunities for healing for others via the curative power of the arts, “via the charm of human form in active learning” (Dewey via Jackson).

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

CAMP Collective

My friend and colleague, Theresa Ronquillo and I are working on a poster presentation for Imagining America. Here is a wordle we generated for our presentation on the CAMP Collective: Community Arts, Media and Performance in Social Work Practice.

Wordle: CAMP collective">

Here is the link to see it in detail: http://www.wordle.net/show/wrdl/2425926/CAMP_collective

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

TEDxSeattle - Fandango Without Borders



I had the delight in April of being part of a group who presented a TEDx Seattle talk on the Seattle Fandango Project and the transnational movement it is a part of with the phenomenal Martha Gonzalez, singer, song writer, and percussionist of E. LA Band, Quetzal and doc student in Women's Studies at UW; Francisco Orozco, doctoral student in Ethnomusicology at UW and co-curator of American Sabor: Latinos in U.S. Popular Music at the EMP; and Kristina Clark, bailadora (dancer) and community member of SFP. We were accompanied by Quetzal Flores of Quetzal; Laura Rebelloso, master of all aspects of the tradition of Son de Jarocho; and the lovely bailadora, Iris Viviros.

I was too green and shy to dance this tradition in a performance at that point, but it was awesome to be a part of. We also presented at the EMP Pop Music Conference in April and are preparing for an event we are facilitating at Imagining America: Artists and Scholars in Public Life at UW later this month.