1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910961342903321

Autore

Muntigl Peter

Titolo

Narrative counselling : social and linguistic processes of change / / Peter Muntigl

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : John Benjamins Pub., c2004

ISBN

9786612160356

9781282160354

1282160354

9789027295347

9027295344

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (357 pages)

Collana

Discourse approaches to politics, society, and culture, , 1569-9463 ; ; v. 11

Disciplina

302.2

Soggetti

Marriage counseling

Counseling

Narrative therapy

Counselor and client

Discourse analysis

Change (Psychology)

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (p. [335]-342) and index.

Nota di contenuto

Narrative Counselling -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC page -- Table of contents -- Acknowledgements -- 1. Modelling semiotic change  in narrative counselling -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. Data -- 1.3. Semogenesis -- 1.4. Description of the counselling interview and semogenesis -- 1.5. Reformulations as transformative practice -- 1.6. Genres as global transformative social processes -- 1.7. Outline of book -- 2. Conversation analysis -- 2.1. Overview -- 2.2. Ethnomethodology -- 2.2.1. Trust -- 2.2.2. Indexicality of expressions -- 2.2.3. Reflexivity -- 2.2.4. Documentary method of interpretation -- 2.3. Conversation analysis (CA) -- 2.3.1. Action sequences -- 2.3.2. Intersubjectivity -- 2.3.3. Context -- 2.3.4. Ordinary members' competences -- 3. Systemic functional linguistics -- 3.1. Overview -- 3.2. Modelling language and social context -- 3.3. Language -- 3.4.



Metafunctions of language -- 3.4.1. Interpersonal metafunction -- 3.4.2. Experiential metafunction -- 3.4.3. Logical -- 3.4.4. Textual metafunction -- 3.5. Discourse semantics -- 3.5.1. Negotiation -- 3.5.2. Conjunction -- 3.5.3. Ideation -- 3.5.4. Identification -- 3.6. Texture &amp -- grammatical metaphor -- 3.7. Social context -- 3.7.1. Register: Context of situation -- 3.7.2. Genre: Context of culture -- 3.7.3. Genre families -- 3.8. Some implications of combining CA and SFL -- 4. Logogenesis -- 4.1. Overview -- 4.2. Representing generic structure -- 4.3. Language patterns and genre units -- 4.4. Macro-genres -- 4.4.1. Curriculum macro-genres -- 4.4.2. Narrative-style interview macro-genre -- 4.5. The counselling macro-genre -- 4.6. Counselling as pedagogic discourse -- 4.7. Marco-genre and counselling theory -- 5. Reformulations as local transformations -- 5.1. Overview -- 5.2. Lexicogrammatical shape -- 5.2.1. Reformulations of projecting -- 5.2.2. Reformulations of doing.

5.2.3. Reformulations of being -- 5.2.4. Agency: Analytic causatives -- 5.3. Formulation-reformulation -- 5.3.1. Nominalization -- 6. Problem construction -- 6.1. Overview -- 6.2. Problem Identification -- 6.2.1. Setting if off: Extreme case formulating -- 6.2.2. Reformulation -- 6.2.3. Reference chains of identified problems -- 6.3. Problem Agency - client sensings -- 6.3.1. Analytic causatives -- 6.3.2. Agency in commands &amp -- processes of sensing -- 6.3.3. Relational causatives -- 6.3.4. Agency &amp -- causality within nominal groups -- 6.4. Negotiating the `goals' of problem construction -- 7. Problem effacement -- 7.1. Overview -- 7.2. Identification of alternative behaviours -- 7.2.1. Projection -- 7.2.2. Appraisal -- 7.3. Alternative event and client agency -- 7.3.1. New Agents -- 7.3.2. Social esteem -- 7.3.3. Contrasting old &amp -- new events -- 7.4. Negotiating the `goals' of problem effacement -- 8. Clients' semiotic repertoires -- 8.1. Overview -- 8.2. Beginning semiotic repertoire -- 8.2.1. Congruent formulations of events -- 8.2.2. Extreme case formulations -- 8.3. Transitional semiotic repertoire: Scaffolding -- 8.3.1. Analytic causatives -- 8.3.2. Cognitions -- 8.3.3. Alternative events -- 8.4. Developed semiotic repertoire -- 8.4.1. Problem Identification -- 8.4.2. Commands -- 8.4.3. Client agency -- 8.5. Social implications of ontogenesis -- 9. Phylogenesis and concluding remarks -- 9.1. Overview -- 9.2. Phylogenesis -- 9.2.1. Evolution of counselling -- 9.2.2. Where along the phylogenetic scale? -- 9.3. Alternative counselling interview -- 9.4. Concluding remarks - future directions -- Notes -- Chapter 1 -- -24pt -- Chapter 3 -- -24pt -- Chapter 5 -- -24pt -- Chapter 6 -- -24pt -- References -- Index -- The series Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture.

Sommario/riassunto

What actually happens in counselling interactions? How does counselling bring about change? How do clients end up producing new and alternative stories of their lives and relationships? By addressing these questions and others, Peter Muntigl explores the narrative counselling process in the context where it is enacted: the unfolding conversation between counsellor and clients. Through a transdisciplinary approach that combines conversation analysis and systemic functional linguistic theory, Muntigl demonstrates how language is used in couples counselling, how language use changes over the course of counselling, and how this process provides clients with new linguistic resources that help them change their social relationships. This book will be a valuable resource not only for linguists and discourse analysts, but also for researchers and practitioners in the fields of counselling, psychotherapy, psychology, and medicine.



2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910865291803321

Autore

Colla Marcus

Titolo

Rethinking Socialist Space in the Twentieth Century / / edited by Marcus Colla, Paul Betts

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2024

ISBN

9783031545818

9783031545801

Edizione

[1st ed. 2024.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (342 pages)

Collana

St Antony's Series, , 2633-5972

Altri autori (Persone)

BettsPaul

Disciplina

320.5310904

Soggetti

World history

World politics

Social history

Russia - History

Europe, Eastern - History

Soviet Union - History

Geography

Space

World History, Global and Transnational History

Political History

Social History

Russian, Soviet, and East European History

Space Studies

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Chapter 1: ‘What, When and Where was Socialist Space?’(Marcus Colla and Paul Betts) -- Part I. Making Socialist Space -- Chapter 2: ‘Visualizing Stalinist Space: The 1951 Geographical Atlas of the USSR for Secondary Schools’(Nick Baron) -- Chapter 3: ‘Room to Experiment: Housing Newlyweds during China’s Early Reform Era’(Jennifer Altehenger) -- Chapter 4: ‘Listening to East Berlin: Can a Soundscape be Socialist?’(Bethan Winter) -- Part II. Globalising Socialist Space -- Chapter 5: ‘Global Bridges, Local Ruins? Re-thinking Socialist



Enterprises as Portals of Globalisation’(Anna Calori) -- Chapter 6: ‘The Reordering of Space and References: Eastern European Geologists in Ghana and Nigeria in the 1960-1970s’(Justyna Turkowska) -- Chapter 7: ‘Building the Space of Internationalism: Socialist Assistance to Mongolia in the 1950s-1970s'(Nikolay Erofeev) -- Chapter 8: ‘A World of Their Own: Vietnamese Students in Late SocialistPoland’(Thuc Linh Nguyen Vu) -- Part III. Building, Rebuilding and Destroying Socialist Space -- Chapter 9: ‘Performing Universality: Building Norms and the Circulation of Theatre Architecture in the RSFSR’(Ksenia Litvinenko) -- Chapter 10: ‘A Monument to Friendship: Socialist Modernity and the Reconstruction of Tashkent, 1966-1975’(Marcus Colla) -- Chapter 11: ‘Moscow’s Khrushchevki in Flux: Reflections on the Imminent Demolition of Twentieth Century Socialist Housing’(Ekaterina Mizrokhi) -- Part IV. Epilogue -- Chapter 12: ‘Space Exploration: The Coordinates of History. An Afterword’(Catriona Kelly). .

Sommario/riassunto

“This skillfully crafted collection shows both the roominess of socialist space as a category of analysis and also its rich and productive potential. A series of imaginative essays explore socialist spatiality across multiple continents as a dynamic and physically and experientially diverse dimension of twentieth-century history.” —Kristin Roth-Ey, University College London, UK “Utilising the tools of spatial history, this volume impressively brings together geographically diverse and methodologically innovative case studies into a collection that provides rich insights into questions of (im)mobility, locality and border crossing, and hierarchies of internationalism, in the socialist world of the Cold War - from East Asia to the Soviet Union to West Africa.” — James Mark, University of Exeter, UK This edited collection explores the problem of space under socialist regimes in the twentieth century. Bringing together contributions from international scholars with expertise in the architectural, urban, social, and cultural history of twentieth-century socialism, the book includes examples from China, Africa, Mongolia, Eastern Europe, and the USSR. The volume reflects on how developments in the field over the past two decades have altered our understanding of how such spaces were constructed (both literally and discursively), how they could become sites of contested meanings, and how they were perceived outside the socialist world. Moreover, the volume is concerned with how scholarly approaches associated with post-colonialism, global history, gender history, and the ‘temporal’ and ‘sensory’ turns have reconfigured our knowledge of, and approach to, the history of socialist space. Marcus Colla is Associate Professor of Modern European Political History at the University of Bergen, Norway. His first book, Prussia in the Historical Culture of the German Democratic Republic: Communists and Kings, was published in 2022. Paul Betts is Professor of Modern European History at St Antony’s College at the University of Oxford, UK. His most recent works include Ruin and Renewal: Civilising Europe after World War II (2022), and a co-written volume Socialism Goes Global: The Soviet Union and Eastern Europe in the Age of Decolonisation (2023). Chapter "Global Bridges, Local Ruins? Re-thinking Socialist Spaces Through the Experience of Non-aligned Enterprises" is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via Springerlink.