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How Saudi migrants’ metapragmatic judgments of Arabic L1 nonverbal greetings change after prolonged exposure to English
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124 |
A crosslinguistic study of the perception of emotional intonation. Influence of the pitch modulations
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125 |
The influence of student perception of teacher emotional intelligence and happiness on foreign language learning
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127 |
How classroom environment and general grit predict foreign language classroom anxiety of Chinese EFL students
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128 |
Queering Hong Kong’s 1997 Handover in Japanese Boys’ Love Comics
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129 |
Foreign language learning boredom: conceptualization and measurement
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Teacher enthusiasm and students’ social-behavioral learning engagement: the mediating role of student enjoyment and boredom in Chinese EFL classes
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131 |
Using corpus linguistics to investigate agency and benign neglect in organisational language policy and planning: the United Nations as a case study
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132 |
Cine documental japonés: de los orígenes a la Guerra del Pacífico (1897-1945)
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Language choice in psychotherapy of multilingual clients: multilingual therapists’ perspective
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Abstract:
Language is an essential part of psychotherapeutic work. In psychotherapy involving more than one language and/or culture, acknowledging the impact of the therapist’s and the client’s language(s) can facilitate achieving the most beneficial therapeutic process and outcome. The field has witnessed a surge in interdisciplinary work combining research methods from multilingualism and psychotherapy. This research aims to investigate the role of multilingualism in emotion expression and interpretation in psychotherapy offered by multilingual/multicultural therapists. Ten individual semi-structured interviews with therapists in the Netherlands focused on therapists’ experience of working as a multilingual/multicultural therapist with culturally and linguistically diverse clients. Thematic analysis of the results showed that language choice influenced the therapeutic process and its outcome in terms of discussing emotional topics, establishing and maintaining rapport with the client, and managing linguistic and cultural differences. Linguistic awareness of therapists allows them to manage the linguistic and cultural issues that inevitably arise in encounters with multilingual/multicultural clients.
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Keyword:
Cultures & Applied Linguistics (from 2021); Languages
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URL: https://doi.org/10.7565/landp.v10i2.5542 https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/45440/ https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/45440/1/45440a.pdf
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135 |
Academic vocabulary in an EAP course: Opportunities for incidental learning from printed teaching materials developed in-house.
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136 |
“We are not amused”. The perception of British humour by British and American English L1 users
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137 |
Review of Cooke & Peutrell (2019): Brokering Britain, educating citizens: Exploring ESOL and citizenship
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138 |
1968 and rural Japan as a site of struggle. Approaches to rural landscapes in the history of Japanese documentary film
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Reducing anxiety in the foreign language classroom: a positive psychology approach
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