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[335]-342) and index. 327 $aNarrative 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 & -- 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. 327 $a5.2.3. 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 & -- processes of sensing -- 6.3.3. Relational causatives -- 6.3.4. Agency & -- 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 & -- 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. 330 $aWhat actually happens in counselling interactions? How does counselling bring about change? How do clients end up producing new and alternative stories of their lives and relationships? By addressing these questions and others, Peter Muntigl explores the narrative counselling process in the context where it is enacted: the unfolding conversation between counsellor and clients. Through a transdisciplinary approach that combines conversation analysis and systemic functional linguistic theory, Muntigl demonstrates how language is used in couples counselling, how language use changes over the course of counselling, and how this process provides clients with new linguistic resources that help them change their social relationships. This book will be a valuable resource not only for linguists and discourse analysts, but also for researchers and practitioners in the fields of counselling, psychotherapy, psychology, and medicine. 410 0$aDiscourse approaches to politics, society, and culture ;$vv. 11. 606 $aMarriage counseling 606 $aCounseling$vCase studies 606 $aNarrative therapy 606 $aCounselor and client 606 $aDiscourse analysis 606 $aChange (Psychology) 615 0$aMarriage counseling. 615 0$aCounseling 615 0$aNarrative therapy. 615 0$aCounselor and client. 615 0$aDiscourse analysis. 615 0$aChange (Psychology) 676 $a302.2 700 $aMuntigl$b Peter$01802222 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910961342903321 996 $aNarrative counselling$94348016 997 $aUNINA