Difference between revisions of "Roca-Cuberes2011"

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|Volume=31
 
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|Pages=221-245
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|URL=https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/text.2011.31.issue-2/text.2011.010/text.2011.010.xml
 
|DOI=10.1515/TEXT.2011.010
 
|DOI=10.1515/TEXT.2011.010
|Abstract=Spanish hospital, is to investigate how psychotherapy is made visible in psy-
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|Abstract=The objective of this study, based on eight psychiatric interviews recorded in a Spanish hospital, is to investigate how psychotherapy is made visible in psychiatric interviews. In particular, the focus is on how psychotherapy is provided in subsequent psychiatric interviews to hospitalized inpatients. Since much of what happens in psychiatric interviews is talk, psychiatrists (as professionals) are responsible for framing such talk as a distinctive type of speech exchange that differs from ordinary conversation. To fulfill their institutional mandate, psychiatrists need to design their speech as therapeutic and produce the necessary “explicative transactions” accordingly. The accomplishment of this task seems to require the employment of an array of third-turn utterance types like repair, assessments, or formulations. A particular word search is also shown to perform a similar job. Altogether, these interactional devices are initiated by the psychiatrist to (i) conduce patients to discover the beneficial effects of psychotherapy and (ii) highlight psychotherapy as a visible process. On the whole, these interactional objects enable the psychiatrist to constitute the psychiatric interview as a self-explicating phenomenon. This investigation utilizes the research tools developed in conversation analysis (CA).
chiatric  interviews. In particular, the focus is on how psychotherapy is pro-
 
vided  in subsequent psychiatric interviews to hospitalized inpatients. Since  
 
much of what happens in psychiatric interviews is talk, psychiatrists (as pro-
 
fessionals) are responsible for framing such talk as a distinctive type of speech  
 
exchange that differs from ordinary conversation. To fulfll their institutional  
 
mandate, psychiatrists need to design their speech as therapeutic and produce  
 
the necessary “explicative transactions” accordingly. The accomplishment of  
 
this task seems to require the employment of an array of third-turn utterance  
 
types like repair, assessments, or formulations. A particular word search is  
 
also shown to perform a similar job. Altogether, these interactional devices are  
 
initiated by the psychiatrist to (i) conduce patients to discover the benefcial
 
effects of psychotherapy and (ii) highlight psychotherapy as a visible process.  
 
On the whole, these interactional objects enable the psychiatrist to constitute  
 
the psychiatric interview as a self-explicating phenomenon. This investigation  
 
utilizes the research tools developed in conversation analysis (CA).
 
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 07:10, 28 November 2019

Roca-Cuberes2011
BibType ARTICLE
Key Roca-Cuberes2011
Author(s) Carles Roca-Cuberes
Title Making psychotherapy visible: a conversation analytic study of some interactional devices employed in psychiatric interviews
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, repair, assessments, psychiatric interviews, formulations, word searches, Conversation Analysis
Publisher
Year 2011
Language English
City
Month
Journal Text & Talk
Volume 31
Number 2
Pages 221–245
URL Link
DOI 10.1515/TEXT.2011.010
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

The objective of this study, based on eight psychiatric interviews recorded in a Spanish hospital, is to investigate how psychotherapy is made visible in psychiatric interviews. In particular, the focus is on how psychotherapy is provided in subsequent psychiatric interviews to hospitalized inpatients. Since much of what happens in psychiatric interviews is talk, psychiatrists (as professionals) are responsible for framing such talk as a distinctive type of speech exchange that differs from ordinary conversation. To fulfill their institutional mandate, psychiatrists need to design their speech as therapeutic and produce the necessary “explicative transactions” accordingly. The accomplishment of this task seems to require the employment of an array of third-turn utterance types like repair, assessments, or formulations. A particular word search is also shown to perform a similar job. Altogether, these interactional devices are initiated by the psychiatrist to (i) conduce patients to discover the beneficial effects of psychotherapy and (ii) highlight psychotherapy as a visible process. On the whole, these interactional objects enable the psychiatrist to constitute the psychiatric interview as a self-explicating phenomenon. This investigation utilizes the research tools developed in conversation analysis (CA).

Notes