Proffering Connections: Psychologising Experience in Psychotherapy and Everyday Life
Conversation analytic research has advanced understanding of the psychotherapeutic process by understanding how psychotherapy is organised over time in and through interaction between clients and therapists. This study progresses knowledge in this area by examining how psychological accounts of expe...
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doaj-db5e7cdbc39944dba2a2805161dc5e4a2021-01-19T15:16:18ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-01-011110.3389/fpsyg.2020.583073583073Proffering Connections: Psychologising Experience in Psychotherapy and Everyday LifeStuart Ekberg0Stuart Ekberg1School of Psychology and Counselling, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, AustraliaCentre for Healthcare Transformation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, AustraliaConversation analytic research has advanced understanding of the psychotherapeutic process by understanding how psychotherapy is organised over time in and through interaction between clients and therapists. This study progresses knowledge in this area by examining how psychological accounts of experience are progressively developed across a range of helping relationships. Data include: (1) approximately 30 h of psychotherapy sessions involving trainee therapists; (2) approximately 15 h of psychotherapy demonstration sessions involving expert therapists; and (3) approximately 30 h of everyday conversations involving close friends or family members. This article reports an analysis of techniques that are used to bring together two experiences that were discussed separately, to proffer a candidate connection between them. This proffering of candidate connections was recurrently used in psychotherapy. If confirmed by a client, a proffered connection could be used to develop a psychological account of a client’s experiences, which could then warrant some psychological intervention. In contrast, the proffering of connections was observed in only one of the everyday conversations included in the current study, where it was used to develop psychological accounts of experience. This shows that although proffering candidate connections is an everyday interactional practice, it appears to be used with greater frequency in psychotherapy, to advance its specific institutional aims.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.583073/fullconversation analysiseveryday conversationpsychotherapynon-specific benefitreferenceconnections |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Stuart Ekberg Stuart Ekberg |
spellingShingle |
Stuart Ekberg Stuart Ekberg Proffering Connections: Psychologising Experience in Psychotherapy and Everyday Life Frontiers in Psychology conversation analysis everyday conversation psychotherapy non-specific benefit reference connections |
author_facet |
Stuart Ekberg Stuart Ekberg |
author_sort |
Stuart Ekberg |
title |
Proffering Connections: Psychologising Experience in Psychotherapy and Everyday Life |
title_short |
Proffering Connections: Psychologising Experience in Psychotherapy and Everyday Life |
title_full |
Proffering Connections: Psychologising Experience in Psychotherapy and Everyday Life |
title_fullStr |
Proffering Connections: Psychologising Experience in Psychotherapy and Everyday Life |
title_full_unstemmed |
Proffering Connections: Psychologising Experience in Psychotherapy and Everyday Life |
title_sort |
proffering connections: psychologising experience in psychotherapy and everyday life |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Psychology |
issn |
1664-1078 |
publishDate |
2021-01-01 |
description |
Conversation analytic research has advanced understanding of the psychotherapeutic process by understanding how psychotherapy is organised over time in and through interaction between clients and therapists. This study progresses knowledge in this area by examining how psychological accounts of experience are progressively developed across a range of helping relationships. Data include: (1) approximately 30 h of psychotherapy sessions involving trainee therapists; (2) approximately 15 h of psychotherapy demonstration sessions involving expert therapists; and (3) approximately 30 h of everyday conversations involving close friends or family members. This article reports an analysis of techniques that are used to bring together two experiences that were discussed separately, to proffer a candidate connection between them. This proffering of candidate connections was recurrently used in psychotherapy. If confirmed by a client, a proffered connection could be used to develop a psychological account of a client’s experiences, which could then warrant some psychological intervention. In contrast, the proffering of connections was observed in only one of the everyday conversations included in the current study, where it was used to develop psychological accounts of experience. This shows that although proffering candidate connections is an everyday interactional practice, it appears to be used with greater frequency in psychotherapy, to advance its specific institutional aims. |
topic |
conversation analysis everyday conversation psychotherapy non-specific benefit reference connections |
url |
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.583073/full |
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AT stuartekberg profferingconnectionspsychologisingexperienceinpsychotherapyandeverydaylife AT stuartekberg profferingconnectionspsychologisingexperienceinpsychotherapyandeverydaylife |
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