In:Relationships in Organized Helping: Analyzing interaction in psychotherapy, medical encounters, coaching and in social media
Edited by Claudio Scarvaglieri, Eva-Maria Graf and Thomas Spranz-Fogasy
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 331] 2022
► pp. 265–286
How are you getting on with these?
Fostering clients’ involvement in the therapeutic alliance in email counseling
Published online: 7 September 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.331.12thu
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.331.12thu
Abstract
This contribution explores how a counselor uses requests to encourage clients to actively participate in email
counseling. Applying positioning theory and relational work from interpersonal pragmatics, I answer the following research
questions: How does the counselor use requests to position clients as active participants? How do affordances of the medium
influence the counselor’s efforts in such requests? I analyze five naturally occurring email counseling exchanges through
content and discourse analysis, adding insight from a practitioner interview. The examined requests aim to improve joint
understanding, foster reflection, elicit solutions, and elicit feedback on coping techniques. Results show that the counselor
uses intricate relational work that constructs clients as active participants. The counselor employs medium affordances such
as asynchronicity or emoticons.
Keywords: online counseling, email, interpersonal pragmatics, relational work, identity, requests, ehealth
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Theoretical background and literature review
- 2.1Interpersonal pragmatics
- 2.2(Online) counseling
- 2.3Interpersonal speech activities: From questions to requests
- 3.Data and methodology
- 4.Results
- 4.1Improving joint understanding
- 4.2Fostering reflection
- 4.3Eliciting solutions
- 4.4Eliciting feedback on applications
- 5.Conclusion and outlook
Notes References
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