This article brings the study of language
to the social phenomenon of gender-related violence as it is
currently being dealt with in institutional settings. It
investigates the social significance of 2nd person pronoun
variation and alternation in 26 professional-victim interactions
in two parallel institutions created to address violence against
women in Brazil: a police station with an all-female staff,
and a feminist crisis intervention center. A quantitative analysis
of patterns of use is complemented by a qualitative analysis
of the interactional strategies of 2nd person pronoun alternation
in the two settings. Pronoun switching is innovatively analyzed
under the theory of code alternation developed by Auer 1995.
The qualitative analysis demonstrates how pronoun alternation
functions as a contextualization cue in face-to-face interactions.
In particular, it shows the different ways in which pronoun
alternation is used to contextualize phenomena such as preference
organization and changes in frames and footings, and locally
to exercise power and/or solidarity.