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Psychotherapy is a 'talking cure'- clients voice their troubles to
therapists, who listen, prompt, question, interpret and generally
try to engage in a positive and rehabilitating conversation with
their clients. Using the sophisticated theoretical and
methodological apparatus of Conversation Analysis - a radical
approach to how language in interaction works - this book sheds
light on the subtle and minutely-organised sequences of speech in
psychotherapeutic sessions. It examines how therapists deliver
questions, cope with resistance, reinterpret experiences and how
they can use conversation to achieve success. Conversation is a key
component of people's everyday and professional lives and this book
provides an unusually detailed insight into the complexity and
power of talk in institutional settings. Featuring contributions
from a collection of internationally-renowned authors, Conversation
Analysis and Psychotherapy will appeal to researchers and graduate
students studying conversation analysis across the disciplines of
psychology, sociology and linguistics.
The importance of emotion in everyday interactions has become a
central topic of research in a wide variety of disciplines,
including linguistics, sociology, social psychology, anthropology,
and communication. Emotion in Interaction offers a collection of
original studies that explore emotion in naturally occurring spoken
interaction. The articles examine both the verbal and non-verbal
resources for expressing emotional stance (lexicon, syntax,
prosody, laughter, crying, facial expression), the emotional
aspects of action sequences (e.g. news delivery and conflicts), and
the role of emotions in institutional interaction (medical
consultations, psychotherapy, health visiting and helpline calls).
What unites the articles is an understanding of the expression of
emotion and the construction of emotional stances as a process that
both shapes and is shaped by the interactional context.
Psychotherapy is a 'talking cure'- clients voice their troubles to
therapists, who listen, prompt, question, interpret and generally
try to engage in a positive and rehabilitating conversation with
their clients. Using the sophisticated theoretical and
methodological apparatus of Conversation Analysis - a radical
approach to how language in interaction works - this book sheds
light on the subtle and minutely organised sequences of speech in
psychotherapeutic sessions. It examines how therapists deliver
questions, cope with resistance, reinterpret experiences and how
they can use conversation to achieve success. Conversation is a key
component of people's everyday and professional lives and this book
provides an unusually detailed insight into the complexity and
power of talk in institutional settings. Featuring contributions
from a collection of internationally renowned authors, Conversation
Analysis and Psychotherapy will appeal to researchers and graduate
students studying conversation analysis across the disciplines of
psychology, sociology and linguistics.
Conversations between AIDS counsellors and their clients bring
delicate and potentially threatening issues into play. In this
study Anssi Perakyla applies the principles of conversation
analysis to his exploration of AIDS counselling, using data from
video-recorded counselling sessions in a London teaching hospital.
He meticulously analyses this data to show how various questioning
techniques, in this case arising from the Milan School Family
Systems theory, operate in these situations, and how counsellors
attempt through the design and placement of their questions to
achieve the cooperation of their clients, with varying success. His
conclusions provide a timely and illuminating insight into the
management of a sensitive topic through various techniques of
indirectness.
Conversations between AIDS counsellors and their clients bring
delicate and potentially threatening issues into play. In this
study Anssi Perakyla applies the principles of conversation
analysis to his exploration of AIDS counselling, using data from
video-recorded counselling sessions in a London teaching hospital.
He meticulously analyses this data to show how various questioning
techniques, in this case arising from the Milan School Family
Systems theory, operate in these situations, and how counsellors
attempt through the design and placement of their questions to
achieve the cooperation of their clients, with varying success. His
conclusions provide a timely and illuminating insight into the
management of a sensitive topic through various techniques of
indirectness.
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