Difference between revisions of "Muntigl-etal2013"

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|Author(s)=Peter Muntigl; Naomi Knight; Ashley Watkins; Adam O. Horvath; Lynne Angus
 
|Author(s)=Peter Muntigl; Naomi Knight; Ashley Watkins; Adam O. Horvath; Lynne Angus
 
|Title=Active retreating: Person-centered practices to repair disaffiliation in therapy
 
|Title=Active retreating: Person-centered practices to repair disaffiliation in therapy
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Psychotherapy; Disaffiliative; Affiliation;  
+
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Psychotherapy; Disaffiliative; Affiliation;
 
|Key=Muntigl-etal2013
 
|Key=Muntigl-etal2013
 
|Year=2013
 
|Year=2013
 
|Journal=Journal of Pragmatics
 
|Journal=Journal of Pragmatics
 
|Volume=53
 
|Volume=53
|Pages=1-20
+
|Pages=1–20
 +
|URL=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378216613000957
 +
|DOI=10.1016/j.pragma.2013.03.019
 +
|Abstract=This article examines how Emotion-focused therapists use person-centred relational practices to re-affiliate with clients after clients have disagreed with therapists’ formulations of clients’ personal experience. Using the methods of conversation analysis, 70 client disagreements were identified from 15 video-taped sessions of Emotion-focused psychotherapy. Our main finding is that, in contexts of disagreement, talk is organized in Emotion-focused therapy to (1) maintain affiliation by neutralizing the potential conflict; and (2) preserve the client's epistemic primacy of experience by privileging the client's viewpoint. Person-centred relational practices were realized in two different ways: Most commonly, therapists would retreat from own position by affiliating with the client's contrasting position through a range of non-verbal (nods) and verbal resources (mirroring repeats, joint completions, second formulations); less common was for therapists to confront the disagreement, primarily as a problem in understanding that requires repair. Whereas the practice of retreating would lead to mutual affiliation and consensus between the participants, confronting the disagreement did not always lead to successful re-affiliation. This is because the therapist's repair initiation would sometimes contest the client's viewpoint, thus fostering further disaffiliation and placing the client's epistemic primacy at risk.
 
}}
 
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Revision as of 13:12, 1 March 2016

Muntigl-etal2013
BibType ARTICLE
Key Muntigl-etal2013
Author(s) Peter Muntigl, Naomi Knight, Ashley Watkins, Adam O. Horvath, Lynne Angus
Title Active retreating: Person-centered practices to repair disaffiliation in therapy
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Psychotherapy, Disaffiliative, Affiliation
Publisher
Year 2013
Language
City
Month
Journal Journal of Pragmatics
Volume 53
Number
Pages 1–20
URL Link
DOI 10.1016/j.pragma.2013.03.019
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This article examines how Emotion-focused therapists use person-centred relational practices to re-affiliate with clients after clients have disagreed with therapists’ formulations of clients’ personal experience. Using the methods of conversation analysis, 70 client disagreements were identified from 15 video-taped sessions of Emotion-focused psychotherapy. Our main finding is that, in contexts of disagreement, talk is organized in Emotion-focused therapy to (1) maintain affiliation by neutralizing the potential conflict; and (2) preserve the client's epistemic primacy of experience by privileging the client's viewpoint. Person-centred relational practices were realized in two different ways: Most commonly, therapists would retreat from own position by affiliating with the client's contrasting position through a range of non-verbal (nods) and verbal resources (mirroring repeats, joint completions, second formulations); less common was for therapists to confront the disagreement, primarily as a problem in understanding that requires repair. Whereas the practice of retreating would lead to mutual affiliation and consensus between the participants, confronting the disagreement did not always lead to successful re-affiliation. This is because the therapist's repair initiation would sometimes contest the client's viewpoint, thus fostering further disaffiliation and placing the client's epistemic primacy at risk.

Notes