The therapeutic relationship in action: how therapists and clients co-manage relational disaffiliation
- Author
- Peter Muntigl (UGent) and Adam Horvath
- Organization
- Abstract
- Over the past three decades a great deal of energy has been invested in examining the consequences of relational stresses and their repair. Less work has been done to examine how therapists and clients actually achieve re-affiliation through verbal and non-verbal resources, how such affiliation becomes vulnerable and at risk, and how therapists attempt to re-establish affiliative ties with the client*or fail to do so. We utilize the method of Conversation Analysis (CA) to examine clinical cases that involve extended episodes of disaffiliation. Clients with different styles of disaffiliation*confrontation and withdrawal* are compared. We show how disaffiliation is interactionally realized in different ways and how this is followed by more or less successful attempts at repair.
- Keywords
- CONVERSATION, ALLIANCE, DEPRESSION, PSYCHOTHERAPY, ORGANIZATION, RUPTURES, REPAIR, disalignment, qualitative research methods, disaffiliation, alliance, conversation analysis, emotion-focused therapy
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-4099917
- MLA
- Muntigl, Peter, and Adam Horvath. “The Therapeutic Relationship in Action: How Therapists and Clients Co-Manage Relational Disaffiliation.” PSYCHOTHERAPY RESEARCH, vol. 24, no. 3, 2013, pp. 327–45, doi:10.1080/10503307.2013.807525.
- APA
- Muntigl, P., & Horvath, A. (2013). The therapeutic relationship in action: how therapists and clients co-manage relational disaffiliation. PSYCHOTHERAPY RESEARCH, 24(3), 327–345. https://doi.org/10.1080/10503307.2013.807525
- Chicago author-date
- Muntigl, Peter, and Adam Horvath. 2013. “The Therapeutic Relationship in Action: How Therapists and Clients Co-Manage Relational Disaffiliation.” PSYCHOTHERAPY RESEARCH 24 (3): 327–45. https://doi.org/10.1080/10503307.2013.807525.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Muntigl, Peter, and Adam Horvath. 2013. “The Therapeutic Relationship in Action: How Therapists and Clients Co-Manage Relational Disaffiliation.” PSYCHOTHERAPY RESEARCH 24 (3): 327–345. doi:10.1080/10503307.2013.807525.
- Vancouver
- 1.Muntigl P, Horvath A. The therapeutic relationship in action: how therapists and clients co-manage relational disaffiliation. PSYCHOTHERAPY RESEARCH. 2013;24(3):327–45.
- IEEE
- [1]P. Muntigl and A. Horvath, “The therapeutic relationship in action: how therapists and clients co-manage relational disaffiliation,” PSYCHOTHERAPY RESEARCH, vol. 24, no. 3, pp. 327–345, 2013.
@article{4099917, abstract = {{Over the past three decades a great deal of energy has been invested in examining the consequences of relational stresses and their repair. Less work has been done to examine how therapists and clients actually achieve re-affiliation through verbal and non-verbal resources, how such affiliation becomes vulnerable and at risk, and how therapists attempt to re-establish affiliative ties with the client*or fail to do so. We utilize the method of Conversation Analysis (CA) to examine clinical cases that involve extended episodes of disaffiliation. Clients with different styles of disaffiliation*confrontation and withdrawal* are compared. We show how disaffiliation is interactionally realized in different ways and how this is followed by more or less successful attempts at repair.}}, author = {{Muntigl, Peter and Horvath, Adam}}, issn = {{1050-3307}}, journal = {{PSYCHOTHERAPY RESEARCH}}, keywords = {{CONVERSATION,ALLIANCE,DEPRESSION,PSYCHOTHERAPY,ORGANIZATION,RUPTURES,REPAIR,disalignment,qualitative research methods,disaffiliation,alliance,conversation analysis,emotion-focused therapy}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{3}}, pages = {{327--345}}, title = {{The therapeutic relationship in action: how therapists and clients co-manage relational disaffiliation}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1080/10503307.2013.807525}}, volume = {{24}}, year = {{2013}}, }
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