145854

(2000) Human Studies 23 (2).

The Berlin wall on the therapist's couch

Christine Leuenberger

pp. 99-121

This paper falls under the rubric of the sociology of knowledge, which bridges the gap between phenomenological philosophy and the human sciences (Berger et al., 1969). It presents an empirical investigation of the communicative construction of psychotherapeutic reality. I examine therapeutic talk and psychotherapists' reconstructions of the transition from state socialism in Germany in 1989. In both instances I show how psychotherapists' commonly shared interpretative conventions and rules of reasoning produce typical accounts. The first part of the paper shows how certain interpretative conventions and rules of reasoning organize therapeutic talk and interaction in general. The second part focuses on how the interpretative conventions typical of therapy also inform psychotherapists' interpretations of the transition from state socialism.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1023/A:1005641318441

Full citation:

Leuenberger, C. (2000). The Berlin wall on the therapist's couch. Human Studies 23 (2), pp. 99-121.

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