Working models: A tool for synthesizing psychology, culture, and power in everyday experiences and internal representations

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Working models: A tool for synthesizing psychology, culture, and power in everyday experiences and internal representations
Abstract
As social beings, we experience ourselves through interactions with others in daily routines that participate in the cultural practices and power relations of broader social structures. Social workers, and social scientists in general, however, have had difficulty conceptualizing and synthesizing this way of being in the world. This paper attempts to respond to that gap by discussing how clinical social workers can use the concept of working models as a tool for listening and understanding in psychotherapy. Utilizing a case example, the paper will discuss three working models, the enactment of power relations, cultural practices, and psychological processes, which provide an integrative framework to inform clinical work.
Publication
Smith College Studies in Social Work
Date
2003-11
Volume
74
Issue
1
Pages
93-111
Journal Abbr
Smith Coll. Stud. Soc. Work
Citation Key
pop00249
ISSN
0037-7317
Language
English
Extra
1 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Citation Key Alias: lens.org/018-182-490-831-257 tex.type: [object Object]
Citation
Keenan, E. K. (2003). Working models: A tool for synthesizing psychology, culture, and power in everyday experiences and internal representations. Smith College Studies in Social Work, 74(1), 93–111. https://doi.org/10.1080/00377310309517706