This book is about the doing and experiencing of diagnosis in everyday life. Diagnoses are revealed as interactive negotiations rather than as the assigning of diagnostic labels. The authors demonstrate, through detailed discourse analyses, how the diagnostic process depends on power and accountabil
Diagnosis as Cultural Practice
β Scribed by Judith Felson Duchan (editor); Dana Kovarsky (editor)
- Publisher
- De Gruyter Mouton
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 320
- Series
- Language, Power and Social Process [LPSP]; 16
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book is about the doing and experiencing of diagnosis in everyday life. Diagnoses are revealed as interactive negotiations rather than as the assigning of diagnostic labels. The authors demonstrate, through detailed discourse analyses, how the diagnostic process depends on power and accountability as expressed through the talk of those engaged in the diagnostic process. The authors also show that diagnostic decisions are not only made by professional experts trained in the art and science of diagnosis, but they can also be made by anyone trying to figure out the nature of everyday problems. Finally, diagnostic reasoning is found to extend beyond typical diagnostic situations, occurring in unexpected places such as written letters of recommendation and talk about the nature of communication. Together, the chapters in this book demonstrate how diagnosis is a communication practice deeply rooted in our culture. The book is interdisciplinary and unusually broad in its focus. The authors come from different experiential scholarly backgrounds. Each of them takes a different look at the impact and nature of the diagnostic process. The diagnoses discussed include autism, Alzheimerβs disease, speech and language disorders, and menopause. The focus is not only on the here and now of the diagnostic interaction, but also on how diagnoses and diagnostic processes change over time. The book can serve as an undergraduate or graduate text for courses offered in various disciplines, including communication, sociology, anthropology, communication disorders, audiology, linguistics, medicine, and disability studies.
β¦ Table of Contents
Frontmatter
Contents
Contributing authors
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Diagnosis as an aid and a curse in dealing with others
Chapter 3. A diagnosed life in an institutional setting: Can the dancer walk?
Chapter 4. From diagnostic to aesthetic: Moving beyond diagnosis
Chapter 5. Revisiting authority in physician-patient interaction
Chapter 6. "I just wanna know why": Patients' attempts and physicians' respronses to premature solicitation of diagnostic information
Chapter 7. Aggravated resistance to problem formulations in therapy
Chapter 8. Learning to diagnose: Production of diagnostic hypotheses in problem-based learning tutorials
Chapter 9. Emotion and objectivity in medical diagnosis
Chapter 10. The diagnostic practises of Speech-Language Pathologists in America over the last century
Chapter 11. The diagnosis of deafness in Nicaragua
Chapter 12. Documenting awareness of the cultural process of diagnosis: Letters of recommendation for medical school faculty
Chapter 13. Speaking about menopause: Possibilities for a cultural discourse analysis
Chapter 14. The diagnosis of the constituents of communication in everyday discourse: Some functions, enabling conditions, consequences, and remedies
Backmatter
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