Search results for "dialogical"

showing 10 items of 82 documents

An agency-promoting learning arena for developing shared work practices

2017

Despite the emerging recognition of the pivotal role played by professional agency within work contexts, little is known about how agency is promoted and enacted in organised work-related learning settings. This chapter focuses on the work conference as an orchestrated agency-promoting learning arena. We understand professional agency as a necessary precondition of work-related learning, and we emphasise the potential of work conferences to activate and promote such agency. Our empirical study investigated three work conferences in education and healthcare organisations in Finland. Utilising assessments, the investigation addressed how the participants perceived the conditions for learning …

Knowledge managementwork conferenceBoundary crossingdialogiEmpirical researchProfessional boundaries0502 economics and businessAgency (sociology)Health caretyössäoppiminenSociologyboundary crossingosallistuminenprofessionalismibusiness.industry05 social sciences050301 educationprofessional agencydialogical agencytoimijuusPublic relationswork-related learningWork (electrical)business0503 education050203 business & management
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Evidencialidad, conocimientos compartidos y atenuación: El caso de ‘[o] eso dicen’

2020

This paper focuses on analyzing the meaning and pragmatic functions of construction [o] eso dicen (‘[or] so they say’), as well as observing the discursive patterns in which it appears. The departure point is the consideration that this construction conveys indirect evidential meanings of different degrees of accessibility or intersubjectivity (reportative and folklore), and therefore its use could be related to the function of pragmatic attenuation activated by the displacement of the origin of the enunciation. In the empirical part of this work, we analyze 65 examples recovered in the analysis of five oral and one written corpus. The results of the study indicate that most of the uses of …

Linguistics and LanguageCorpus analysisLiterature and Literary TheoryFolkloremedia_common.quotation_subjectDialogical selfLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsEvidentialitySociologyFunction (engineering)IntersubjectivityMeaning (linguistics)media_commonRevista signos
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Effects of authority: voicescapes in children's beliefs about the learning of English

2012

This paper examines learner beliefs from a dialogical point of view. Drawing on the writings of the Bakhtin circle, it sees beliefs as shared and recycled viewpoints that are multivoiced: they echo the voices of others as well as the voice of the speaker. A longitudinal interview study was conducted among a group of young Finnish learners of English. The analysis of the data focused on the voicework present in the learners' answers: how they, on the one hand, echoed or even repeated the voices of authority, and, on the other hand, brought forward their own insights. The results indicate that the authoritative voices strongly influence how the individual viewpoints are formed and presented a…

Linguistics and LanguagePedagogyDialogical selfInterview studyPsychologyLanguage acquisitionViewpointsLanguage and LinguisticsInternational Journal of Applied Linguistics
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Voices in discourses: Dialogism, Critical Discourse Analysis and ethnic identity

2006

In this article we attempt to combine the Bakhtinian, dialogical philosophy of language and critical discourse analysis (CDA) with our analysis of ethnic identity. The data we discuss are an interview with a Sami journalist who works in the Sami media. We analyse the interview from the points of view of dialogism and CDA to illustrate how identity must be understood as something which is both individual and social in nature.  We reject the earlier essentialist interpretations of identity which see it as purely individual and psychological in nature. At the same time, we argue that those views of identity that see it as exclusively socially constructed can be misleading as well. We aim to il…

Linguistics and LanguageSociology and Political ScienceEssentialismDialogical selfEthnic groupSubject (philosophy)Identity (social science)Gender studiesSocial constructionismWitnessLanguage and LinguisticsPhilosophyCritical discourse analysisHistory and Philosophy of ScienceSociologyJournal of Sociolinguistics
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Dialogue and Dominance in Couple Therapy for Depression: Exploring Therapists' Responses in Creating Collaborative Moments.

2019

Previous investigations have found specific communication patterns in couples dealing with depression, specifically when depression concurs with conjugal conflicts. The presence of these patterns can reflect couples' difficulties in engaging in collaborative communication during their sessions, posing a real challenge for therapists. This exploratory study uses a dialogical approach to examine issues of dominance and type of dialogue in two couples who differed in terms of their levels of dyadic adjustment. The therapists' reactions were explored in order to detect the kinds of responses that were most effective at engendering a collaborative attitude in therapy sessions. The method used to…

MaleDialogicSocial PsychologyDepressionCommunicationDialogical selfExploratory researchHostilityProfessional-Patient RelationsMiddle AgedClinical PsychologyCouples TherapyDominance (ethology)medicineHumansFemaleInterpersonal Relationsmedicine.symptomPsychologySpousesSocial psychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Family processReferences
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Open dialogues with good and poor outcomes for psychotic crises: examples from families with violence.

2002

In Open Dialogue the first treatment meeting occurs within 24 hr afer contact and includes the social network of the patient. The aim is to generate dialogue to construct words for the experiences embodied in the patient’s psychotic symptoms. All issues are analyzed and planned with everyone present. A dialogical sequence analysis was conducted comparing good and poor outcomes offirst-episode psychotic patients. In good outcomes, the clients had both interactional and semantic dominance, and the dialogue tookplace in a symbolic language and in a dialogical form. Already at the first meeting, in the good outcome cases, the team responded to the client’s words in a dialogical way, but in the …

MaleDomestic ViolencePsychotherapistSociology and Political ScienceSocial Psychologymedicine.medical_treatmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlContext (language use)Patient Care PlanningIntervention (counseling)medicineHumansFinlandmedia_commonPatient Care TeamSocial networkbusiness.industryCommunicationDialogical selfSocial SupportGroup ProcessesClinical PsychologyNegotiationCrisis InterventionTreatment OutcomePsychotic DisordersFamily TherapyFemaleForm of the GoodbusinessPsychologyPublic Health AdministrationSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Crisis interventionJournal of marital and family therapy
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The Embodied Attunement of Therapists and a Couple within Dialogical Psychotherapy: An Introduction to the Relational Mind Research Project

2015

In dialogical practice, therapists seek to respond to the utterances of clients by including in their own response what the client said. No research so far exists on how, in dialogs, therapists and clients attune themselves to each other with their entire bodies. The research program The Relational Mind is the first to look at dialog in terms of both the outer and the inner dialogs of participants (clients and therapists), observed in parallel with autonomic nervous system (ANS) measurements. In the ANS, the response occurs immediately, even before conscious thought, making it possible to follow how participants in a multiactor dialog synchronize their reactions and attune themselves to eac…

MalePsychotherapistSocial Psychologycouple therapyEmotionsSmilingSession (web analytics)AttunementCouples TherapyRespiratory RateHeart RatePhenomenonKinesicsHumansDialog boxrhythmic attunementta515CommunicationDialogical selfautonomic nervous systemGalvanic Skin ResponseProfessional-Patient RelationsHigh stressClinical PsychologyEmbodied cognitionFemaledialogical investigationsPsychologyArousalSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Stress PsychologicalFamily Process
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The dialogical bricoleur? Expectations towards internet-based services in Norway and Sweden

2012

Mental health is a multifaceted concept that has been described and understood differently throughout history. The emergence of internet-based services has signalled changes in both the delivery of ...

Medical educationmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryPublic healthDialogical selfMental healthNursingInternet basedHealth caremedicineThe Internetsense organsskin and connective tissue diseasesbusinessHealth policyNordic Social Work Research
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Unions and industrial improvement projects: Building a common momentum

2018

The purpose of this article is to define the potential role unions can play in a general quest for improved practice in an industrial company. Workplace innovation (WPI) is one example of such a measure. Lean is another. The article outlines important elements when implementing improvement tools like Workplace Innovation and Lean practice. The efforts are focused at company level, and experiences from a Norwegian industrial company highlight the areas of importance. The amplifying role a union can play in an improvement process is discussed, and motives and processes are clarified, in order to show the role of unions in a broader sense. The “Nordic” tradition of organising work-life frames …

Momentum (finance)Order (exchange)business.industryProcess (engineering)media_common.quotation_subjectDialogical selfResistance (psychoanalysis)Joint (building)Public relationsbusinessLean manufacturingDemocracymedia_commonEuropean Journal of Workplace Innovation
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Der hermeneutische Akt des Übersetzens. Schleiermacher und die Literaturverfilmung

2015

Friedrich Schleiermacher’s notion of translation can be applied productively to the dialogical relationship of literature and film. Whilst a literary translator translates the original text into the target language, thus stepping back behind the original, this process is entirely different in the case of literary adaptation. Here it is the director who takes the author’s place, ostensibly causing the original text to disappear. Furthermore, the translation of a literary text into the language of cinema is an interpretative engagement with, and an attempt to better understand, the original work. In contrast with translation in a stricter sense, which has by its nature a duty to uphold and to…

Movie theaterSalientAestheticsbusiness.industryPhilosophymedia_common.quotation_subjectDialogical selfbusinessDutymedia_commonTheme (narrative)
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