SFiO
The InterAction Collection
OF SOLUTION FOCUS PRACTICE IN ORGANISATIONS · Vol 1 - 2009 Edition

Beyond Complaints

Jul 30, 2024

Gale Miller

Abstract

This essay represents the evolution of thinking about solu- tion focused brief therapy within the Milwaukee group in the late 1980s and early 1990s. (See also the changing language of Steve de Shazer’s books – 1982, 1985, 1988, 1991 – during this time.) This essay is one take on a solu- tion focused interactional view of therapy, a view that emphasises the collaborative building of solutions. Wittgen- stein’s (1958) concept of language games is central to this discussion, as it continues to be today. The strong focus on goals in this essay is, however, not so emphasised in contem- porary SF brief therapy conversations. While explicit goal-setting remains an option in SF brief therapy sessions, goal-setting is now recognised as an implicit aspect of conversations about the future.

Two aspects of the essay have not been significantly devel- oped by SF brief therapy writers. The first involves exploring how SF brief therapy is a distinctive process of narrative construction. Such explorations might extend the longstanding emphasis on Wittgensteinian philosophy in SF brief therapy. The second undeveloped theme in this paper is deconstructionism. De Shazer drew on aspects of decon- structionism in Putting Difference to Work, but much is left to be done in this area. This is the first time this essay has been published in English.

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Gale Miller
Gale Miller
InterAction Contributor

Department of Social and Cultural Sciences, Institute for Family Studies, Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

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