Abstract

The experience of loss of agency is one of the reasons for clients to go for psychotherapy. Enhancing clients’ agency has been considered a fundamental factor for successful treatment in psychiatry and psychotherapy, yet few studies have investigated the interactional realization of how therapists do this in authentic psychotherapeutic encounters. Drawing on audio-recorded talk-in-interaction between clients and psychotherapists in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) encounters at a mental health center in China, this paper uses the method of conversation analysis to demonstrate how therapists ascribe agency positions to clients by issuing formulations of what the clients have just said. Two types of formulation were identified: affirmative formulations and challenging formulations. In the first type, the therapists highlight the positive aspect of the clients’ description of their experiences and ascribe an agentic position to the clients. In the second, the therapists challenge the clients’ implausible views and their non-agentic positioning of themselves. This study shows that the therapists’ formulation could be employed to manage the epistemic difficulties associated with claiming knowledge about the clients’ inner states and assessing their feelings. In this sense, the formulation is a robust interactional device in negotiating epistemic problems in addressing the clients’ experiences and promoting their agency in therapy. However, it is noteworthy that in the challenging formulation, therapists claim privileged access to the clients’ knowledge domain and challenge their prior epistemic status, which might run the risk of engendering clients’ resistance.

Highlights

  • Agency is one of the central issues in psychotherapy

  • We have described how cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) therapists ascribed agency positions to their clients by issuing formulations of what the clients have just said in their problem talk

  • The affirmative formulation was employed when the clients took a positive stance toward their experiences

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Agency is one of the central issues in psychotherapy. Generally, it refers to the clients’ ability to attribute thoughts, feelings, and actions to themselves as well as their capability to take initiative and responsibility for their own actions in everyday life (Avdi, 2005; Etelämäki et al, 2021). Previous CA researchers have pointed out that formulation is about summarizing, explaining, or giving the gist or upshot of what has been said by the client, it is not entirely neutral and is rarely undertaken for its own sake; rather, it can be tendentious in that it focuses on some particular element of the previous talk and preserves that element as the topic for further talk (Heritage, 1985; Hutchby, 2005; Weiste, 2016) This characteristic makes formulation an important interactional resource for psychotherapists to transform clients’ accounts into a problem that can be therapeutically addressed (Hutchby, 2005; Weiste, 2016), or to shepherd the clients’ presentation toward subsequent therapeutical interpretation (Antaki et al, 2005; Antaki, 2008). Three aspects were examined: which include the clients’ problem statement, the therapists’ formulation, and the turns and agendas following the formulation

RESULTS
CL: e: er en fanzheng shi: hao yes anyway be good
13 CL: en bu hm xianmu bieren admire others neng mangmude qu can blindly go
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
ETHICS STATEMENT
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