AuburnandLea2003

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AuburnandLea2003
BibType ARTICLE
Key AuburnandLea2003
Author(s) Timothy Auburn, Susan Lea
Title Doing cognitive distortions: A discursive psychology analysis of sex offender treatment talk
Editor(s)
Tag(s) Discursive Psychology
Publisher
Year 2003
Language
City
Month
Journal British Journal of Social Psychology
Volume 42
Number 2
Pages 281–298
URL Link
DOI 10.1348/014466603322127256
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Theories of sex offending have for several years relied upon the notion of cognitive distortions as an important cause of sexual offending. In this study we critique this notion and suggest that the sort of phenomenon addressed by cognitive distortions is better understood by adopting a discursive psychology approach. In this approach, talk is regarded as occasioned and action oriented. Thus ‘cognitive distortions’ are conceptualized as something people do rather than something that people have. Sessions from a prison-based sex offender treatment programme were taped and transcribed. A discursive psychology analysis was conducted on those sessions relating to offenders' first accounts of their offences. Our analysis suggests that offenders utilize a particular narrative organization to manage their blame and responsibility for the offence. This organization is based on a first part which is oriented to quotidian precursors to the offence and an immediately following second which is oriented to a sudden shift in the definition of the situation. The implications of this analysis are discussed, in relation to the status of cognitive distortions and treatment.

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