Browsing by Author "Gaete, Joaquin"
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- ItemClarifying for an Other: Six Conversational Practices to Foster Therapeutic Change from a Subjective Change Theory Perspective(2019) Gaete, Joaquin; Aristegui, Roberto; Krause, MarianeDrawing from the theory of subjective change in psychotherapy, this theory-building case study examines one successful therapeutic change process. The study characterizes conversational micro-practices featuring in segments of conversation theoretically linked to therapeutic change called change episodes (CE), containing three types of observable generic indicators of change: input, process, and output. For this study the 16 CE containing indicators of the second level (process) were examined. Six conversational practices involving six therapeutic assumptions are presented as a result of the study, which were consequential in discursively accomplishing preferred self-references (PSR) within CE related to process. Given that generating a "subjective theory" about the client's own change process emerges as a byproduct of conversationally clarifying PSR for and with the therapist (Le., intersubjective validation), this study contributes further specifying the theory of subjective change.
- ItemDialogues and self-reference: change processes in psychotherapy from speech acts's perspective(FOUNDATION ADVANCEMENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2009) Aristegui, Roberto; Gaete, Joaquin; Munoz, Gonzalo; Salazar, Jose I.; Krause, Mariane; Vilches, Oriana; Tomicic, Alemka; Ramirez, IvonneThis article is the result of a research in the frame of therapeutic process, based on Generic Change Indicators (Krause et al., 2006a). Along with Speech Acts Theory (Searle, 2002; Aristegui et al., 2005) it is proposed to use the Dialogical Self Model (Hermans, 1996; Valsiner, 2007) as a suitable device for characterizing and differentiating change and stagnant episodes, in therapeutic conversation. The analysis unit of study is constituted by extracts from two therapies of different theoretical orientation, with change and stagnant episodes previously identified through indicators derived from Subjective Change Theory. The study of change episodes indicates dialogical characteristics of the therapeutic conversation which suppose a self-referential language game where therapist and consultant build a self-position description (subject) that commits with certain ilocutive intentions of action. The study and comparison of change episodes with stagnate episodes integrate in the discussion the distinctions of experience focus in first person and veritative symmetry applied to self referential-performativity and the notions self-dialogicality dialogicality according to the self-dialoglical theory (Hermans, 1996; Valsiner, 2007; Anderson, 1999).