Published October 4, 2019 | Version v1
Journal article Open

On how to include psychotherapists in research on psychotherapies

Creators

  • 1. Emeritus Professor of Historical Psychology, University of Manchester

Description

In this paper I examine three broadly ethnomethodological projects on organisation
of psychotherapeutic practices (Fitzgerald and Leudar 2010; Leudar, Sharrock, et
al. 2008; and Davies, Thomas and Leudar 1999). Psychotherapists participated in
the research in all these projects; the purpose of the current examination is to ascertain
how they contributed to the projects and whether their contributions were necessary.
The expectation was that the therapists provided background information,
which helped the ethnomethodologists to understand the therapy talk, not just as
conversations but also as therapeutic practices. One conclusion of the present examination
is that conversation analysis of psychotherapy indeed needs to be enriched
by background ethnographic information in general; the actual participation
of the psychotherapists ensures that it is used in a relevant and occasioned way. The
second is that the work on ‘mentalisation’ in psychotherapy presupposes understanding
of how therapists and clients contextualize their talk. The third is that
psychotherapy does not happen just in the ‘consulting room’ but extends into the
life beyond—this further points to the relevance of ‘ethnograpical augmentation’.

Notes

+ Sprache: eng

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