The origins of what is now termed "discursive psychology" can arguably be traced to the late 1980s, and the collaborative research and analysis sessions that took place as part of
Loughborough University's then newly formed Discourse and Rhetoric Group (DARG). A key landmark was the publication of
Jonathan Potter and
Margaret Wetherell's classic text
Discourse and social psychology: Beyond attitudes and behaviour in 1987. Charles Antaki, writing in the
Times Higher Education Supplement, described the impact of this book: The linguistic reorientation associated with discursive psychology drew on intellectual movements that challenged traditional psychological explanation, including
post-structuralism,
postmodernism,
Foucault’s analyses of knowledge/power, theories of ideology,
Lacanian psychoanalysis,
microsociology, and
social constructionism. It was further informed by analytic traditions such as
conversation analysis,
ethnomethodology,
classical rhetoric, the sociology of science,
Rom Harré’s
ethogenics, and
speech act theory. The field itself was originally labeled as DP during the early 1990s by Derek Edwards and Potter at Loughborough University. It has since been developed and extended by a number of others, including (but by no means limited to): Charles Antaki, Malcolm Ashmore,
Frederick Attenborough,
Bethan Benwell, Steve Brown, Carly Butler, Derek Edwards,
Alexa Hepburn, Eric Laurier, Hedwig te Molder,
Sue Speer, Liz Stokoe, Cristian Tileaga, Sally Wiggins and
Sue Wilkinson. Discursive psychology draws on the
philosophy of mind of
Gilbert Ryle and the later
Ludwig Wittgenstein, the rhetorical approach of
Michael Billig, the
ethnomethodology of
Harold Garfinkel, the
conversation analysis of
Harvey Sacks and
the sociology of scientific knowledge of those like
Mike Mulkay,
Steve Woolgar and
Bruno Latour. The term "discursive psychology" was designed partly to indicate that there was not just a methodological shift at work in this form of analysis, but also, and at the same time, that it involved some fairly radical theoretical rethinking. ==Study==