Bloch2022

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Bloch2022
BibType ARTICLE
Key Bloch2022
Author(s) Steven Bloch, Charles Antaki
Title How professionals deal with clients’ explicit objections to their advice
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, advice, resistance, objections, call-takers, Parkinson’s, medical interactions, epistemics
Publisher
Year 2022
Language
City
Month
Journal Discourse Studies
Volume 24
Number 4
Pages 385-403
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/14614456221110669
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Previous literature on advice-resistance in medicine and welfare has tended to focus on patients’ or callers’ inexplicit resistance (minimal responses, silence and so on). But clients also raise explicit objections, which put up a firmer barrier against the advisor’s efforts. In a novel look at resistance, we show that one important distinction among objections is their epistemic domain: whether the client’s objection is in their own world (e.g. experiencing pain), or in the world of the practitioner (e.g. difficulties in making appointments). We show that the practitioner may try to manoeuvre the objection onto grounds where their own expertise will win the day, in five ways: conceding the objection’s validity as a preface to moving on; proposing a ‘work-around’ that effectively repeats the original advice; selecting an aspect of it that could be remediated; correcting the client’s understanding of the challenges of the advice; and stressing the urgency of the original course of action. We discuss the distinction between objections to solicited and unsolicited advice, and the role of objections in revealing, and affirming, a service-user’s personal life-world contingencies.

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