principles of dialogue face a specific but inevitable task: it must construct the other as a
dialogical being, but it must do so in a dialogical and non-imposing way. In other words, an
account of the power-dialogue dynamic is needed. In this paper certain features of power
that may be intrinsic to therapeutic applications of the dialogical self are identified. It is
argued that therapist and client are institutionalized “primary positions” that significantly …