Jonathan
Potter – Articles
Publications are available here.
Click on the highlighted link – this will either download a PDF or email
for a reprint. If there is no highlight
just email and ask: J.A.Potter@lboro.ac.uk
They are roughly categorized – but these are just the broadest of
guides. Most cut across these
categories. Some of them, particularly
the most recent, are from the published article or chapter. Others are produced from a final version, but
may have minor changes due to typesetting and proofreading issues.
Articles and chapters are provided on the basis that they are for
personal use. Any further/multiple
distribution, publication, or commercial use of this copyrighted material requires
permission from the author and publisher.

Theory and
the status of cognition
Potter, J. (in
press). Rereading Discourse and Social Psychology: Transforming social psychology, British Journal of Social Psychology.
Potter, J.
(in press). How to analyse experience, Discourse & Society.
Potter, J. (2010). Contemporary
discursive psychology: Issues, prospects and Corcoran’s awkward ontology,
British Journal of Social Psychology, 49, 691–701.
Potter, J.
(2010). Disciplinarity and the application of social
research, British Journal of Social
Psychology, in press.
Edwards, D.,
Hepburn, A. & Potter, J. (2009). Psychology,
sociology and interaction: Disciplinary allegiance or analytic quality?, Qualitative
Research, 9,
119-128.
Potter, J. & Hepburn, A.
(2008). Discursive
constructionism. In Holstein, J.A. & Gubrium, J.F. (Eds). Handbook of constructionist research (pp.
275-293). New York: Guildford.
Potter, J. & Puchta, C. (2007). Mind, mousse and moderation. In A. Hepburn and S. Wiggins (Eds). Discursive
research in practice (pp. 104-203).
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Potter, J. (2006). Cognition and
conversation, Discourse Studies, 8, 131-140.
Potter, J. (2005). Making
psychology relevant, Discourse & Society,
16, 739-747.
Potter, J. & Edwards, D. (2003).
Sociolinguistics,
cognitivism and discursive psychology, International Journal of
English Studies, 3, 93-109. ( This is a revised version of Potter, J. & Edwards, D.
(2001). Sociolinguistics, cognitivism and discursive
psychology. In N. Coupland,
S. Sarangi, & C. Candlin
(Eds.) Sociolinguistics and Social Theory
(pp. 88-103). London; Longman.)
Potter, J. (2003). Discursive
psychology: Between method and paradigm, Discourse & Society, 14,
783-794.
Potter, J. (2003). Practical
scepticism, Discourse
& Society, 14, 799-801.
Potter, J. & Edwards, D. (2003).
Rethinking
cognition: On Coulter, discourse and mind, Human Studies, 26, 165-181.
Potter, J. (2000). Post
cognitivist psychology, Theory and Psychology,
10, 31-37.
Edwards, D. & Potter, J. (1999). Language and
causal attribution: A rejoinder to Schmid and Fiedler, Theory & Psychology, 9, 849-63.
Potter, J. & Edwards, D. (1999). Social
representations and discursive psychology, Culture & Psychology, 5,
445-456.
Potter, J. (1998). Cognition as
context (whose
cognition?), Research on Language and
Social Interaction, 31,
29-44.
Potter, J. (1998). Discursive
social psychology: From attitudes to evaluations, European Review of Social Psychology, 9, 233-266.
Method
Potter, J.
& Hepburn, A. (2012). Eight challenges for interview researchers.
J.F. Gubrium and J.A. Holstein (Eds). Handbook
of Interview Research (2nd Ed.)(pp. 555-570). London: Sage.
Potter, J. (2012). Discourse
analysis and discursive psychology.
In Cooper, H. (Ed.). APA handbook of research methods in
psychology: Vol. 2. Quantitative, qualitative, neuropsychological and
biological (pp. 111-130).
Washington: American Psychological Association Press.
Potter, J.
(2011). Discursive
psychology and discourse analysis.
In Gee, J.P. & Handford, M. (Eds). Routledge handbook of discourse analysis
(pp. 104-119). London: Routledge.
Wiggins, S. & Potter, J. (2008).
Discursive
psychology. In Willig, C. &
Hollway, W. (Eds). Handbook
of qualitative research in psychology (pp. 72-89). London; Sage.
Potter, J. & Hepburn, A. (2007).
Life is out
there: A comment on Griffin, Discourse Studies, 9, 277-283.
Potter, J. & Hepburn, A. (2005).
Qualitative
interviews in psychology – Problems and possibilities, Qualitative research in
Psychology, 2, 38-55. (Note that
the audio materials and full transcript associated with this article are
available via the DARG web site - www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/ss/centres/dargindex.htm)
Potter, J. (2004). Discourse
analysis as a way of analysing naturally occurring talk.
In D. Silverman (Ed.) Qualitative Analysis:
Issues of theory and method, 2nd Edition (pp. 200-221). London:
Sage.
Potter, J. (2003) Studying the
standardized interview as interaction.
Review of Houtkoop-Steenstra Interaction and
the standardized survey interview and Maynard et al., Standardization and Tacit
Knowledge, Qualitative Research, 3, 269-278.
Potter, J. (2003). Discourse
analysis. In M. Hardy & A. Bryman
(Eds) Handbook
of Data Analysis (pp. 607-624). London; Sage.
Hepburn, A. & Potter, J.
(2003). Discourse
analytic practice. In C. Seale, D.
Silverman, J. Gubrium & G. Gobo (Eds). Qualitative
research practice (pp. 180-196).
London; Sage.
Potter, J. (2003). Discourse
analysis and discursive psychology. In
P.M. Camic, J.E. Rhodes and L. Yardley (Eds). Qualitative research in psychology:
Expanding perspectives in methodology and design (pp. 73-94). Washington:
American Psychological Association.
Antaki, C., Billig, M., Edwards, D.
& Potter, J. (2003). Discourse analysis means doing analysis: A critique of
six analytic shortcomings, Discourse Analysis Online, 1, [http://www.shu.ac.uk/daol/articles/v1/n1/a1/antaki2002002-paper.html]. This is reprinted as: Antaki, C., Billig, M.,
Edwards, D. & Potter, J. (2003). El Análisis del discurso implaca analizar: Critica de seis atajos analiticos. Athenea
Digital, 3, [http://antalya.uab.es/athenea/num3/antaki.pdf] (Note that the audio materials
and full transcript associated with this article are available via the DARG web
site - www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/ss/centres/dargindex.htm)
Potter,
J. (2002). Two kinds of
natural, Discourse
Studies, 4, 539-542.
Topics
1. New work
on topics such as threats, laughter and on disability
Hepburn,
A. & Potter, J. (2011). Threats:
Power, family mealtimes and social influence, British Journal of Social Psychology 50, 99-120.
Potter, J.
& Hepburn, A. (2010). Putting
aspiration into words: ‘Laugh particles’, managing descriptive trouble and
modulating action, Journal of
Pragmatics, 42, 1543-1555.
Patterson,
A. & Potter, J. (2009). Caring: Building
a ‘psychological disposition’ in pre-closing sequences in phone calls with a
young adult with a learning disability, British
Journal of Social Psychology, 48,
447-465.
2. Child
protection helpline interaction, crying, advice delivery and advice resistance
Hepburn, A. & Potter,
J. (forthcoming). Crying and crying
responses. In A. Peräkylä
& M-L. Sorjonen (Eds). Emotion in interaction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Potter, J.
& Hepburn, A. (forthcoming). Somewhere
between evil and normal: Traces of morality in a child protection helpline. In J. Cromdal &
M. Tholander (Eds). Morality in
Practice: Exploring Childhood, Parenthood and Schooling in Everyday Life. London: Equinox.
Hepburn, A. & Potter,
J. (2011). Designing
the recipient: Some practices that manage advice resistance in institutional
settings, Social Psychology
Quarterly74, 216-241.
Butler,
C., Potter, J., Danby, S., Emmison, M. & Hepburn,
A. (2010). Advice
implicative interrogatives: Building ‘client centred’ support in a children’s
helpline, Social Psychology
Quarterly, 73, 265-287.
Hepburn, A.
& Potter, J. (2010). Interrogating
tears: Some uses of ‘tag questions’ in a child protection helpline.
In A.F. Freed & S. Ehrlich (Eds). “Why Do You Ask?”:
The Function of Questions in Institutional Discourse
(pp.
69-86) Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Hepburn, A.
& Potter, J. (2007). Crying
receipts: Time, empathy and institutional practice, Research on Language and
Social Interaction, 40, 89-116.
Potter, J. & Hepburn, A. (2007). Discursive
psychology, institutions and child protection. In A. Weatherall,
B. Watson & C. Gallois (Eds).
Language and Social Psychology Handbook (pp. 160-181).
Potter, J. & Hepburn, A. (2003). I’m a bit
concerned – Early
actions and psychological constructions in a child protection helpline, Research
on Language and Social Interaction, 36, 197-240.
3. Talk
and institutions
Potter, J. & Hepburn, A. (2010). A kind of governance: Rules, time and
psychology in institutional organization.
In Hindmarsh, J. & Llewellyn, N. (Eds). Organization, Interaction and Practice (pp. 49-73). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Potter, J. & Hepburn, A. (2007). Chairing
democracy:
Psychology, time and negotiating the institution. In J.P. McDaniel and K. Tracy (Eds). The prettier doll: Rhetoric,
discourse and ordinary democracy (pp. 176-204). Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press.
(Note that the video materials and full transcript associated with this
article are available via the DARG web site - www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/ss/centres/dargindex.htm)
Potter, J.
(2005). A discursive
psychology of institutions, Social Psychology Review, 7, 25-35.
4. Eating,
interaction and evaluations
Craven, A. & Potter, J.
(2010). Directives:
Contingency and entitlement in action, Discourse Studies, 12, 1-24.
Wiggins, S.
& Potter, J. (2003). Attitudes and
evaluative practices: Category vs. item and subjective vs. objective constructions in
everyday food assessments, British Journal of Social Psychology, 42, 513-531.
Wiggins, S.,
Potter, J. & Wildsmith, A.V. (2001). Eating your
words: Discursive
psychology and the reconstruction of eating practices, Journal of Health Psychology, 6, 5-15.
5. Gender
and heterosexism
Hepburn, A.
& Potter, J. (2010). Recipients
designed: Tag questions and gender. In S. Speer & E. Stokoe (Eds). Conversation
analysis and gender (pp. 137-154).
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Clarke, V.,
Kitzinger, C. & Potter, J. (2004). ‘Kids are just
cruel anyway’: Lesbian and gay parents’ talk about homophobic bullying, British
Journal of Social Psychology, 43,
531-550.
Speer, S.
& Potter, J. (2000). The management
of heterosexist talk: Conversational resources and prejudiced claims, Discourse & Society, 11, 543-572.
6. Focus
groups and method as topic
Puchta, C., Potter, J. & Wolff, F. (2004). Repeat receipts: A device for generating visible
data in market research focus groups, Qualitative Research, 4, 285-309. PDF
Puchta, C. & Potter, J. (2002).
Manufacturing
individual opinions: Market research focus groups and the discursive psychology of
attitudes, British Journal of Social
Psychology, 41, 345-363.
Puchta, C. & Potter, J. (1999). Asking
elaborate questions: Focus groups and the management of spontaneity, Journal of Sociolinguistics, 3, 314-335.
Selected
older publications
These are mostly available as PDFs – click on the link and it
should download.
Ashmore, M., Myers, G. and Potter, J. (1994). Seven days in
the library: Discourse, rhetoric, reflexivity. In S. Jasanoff,
G. Markle, J. Petersen and T. Pinch (Eds) Handbook of
Science, Technology and Society (pp. 321-42). London: Sage.
Edwards, D.,
Ashmore, M. and Potter, J., (1995). Death and
furniture: The
rhetoric, politics and theology of bottom line arguments against relativism, History of the Human Sciences, 8,
25-49.
Hicks, D.
and Potter, J. (1991). Sociology of
scientific knowledge - A reflexive citation analysis or: science disciplines and
disciplining science, Social Studies of
Science, 21, 459-501.
Litton, I. and Potter, J. (1985). Social
representations in the ordinary explanation of a ‘riot’, European Journal of Social Psychology, 15, 371-388.
McKinlay, A. and Potter, J. (1987).
Social
representations: A conceptual critique, Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour, 17, 471-87.
Potter, J. and Litton, I. (1985). Some problems underlying
the theory of social representations, British Journal of Social
Psychology, 24, 81-90.
Potter, J. and Mulkay,
M. (1985). Scientists’
interview talk: Interviews as a technique for revealing participants’
interpretative practices. In M. Brenner, J. Brown and D. Canter (Eds) The Research
Interview: Uses and Approaches (pp. 247-71). London: Academic Press.
Potter, J. and Reicher,
S. (1987). Discourses of
community and conflict: The organization of social categories in accounts of a ‘riot’, British Journal of Social Psychology, 26,
25-40.
Potter, J.
and Wetherell, M. (1988). Accomplishing
attitudes: Fact and
evaluation in racist discourse, Text, 8,
51-68.
Potter, J.,
Wetherell, M. and Chitty, A. (1991). Quantification
rhetoric - cancer on
television, Discourse and Society, 2,
333-365.
Potter, J., Wetherell, M., Gill, R. and
Edwards, D. (1990). Discourse:
Noun, verb or social practice, Philosophical Psychology, 3, 205-217.
Wetherell,
M., Stiven, H. and Potter, J. (1987). Unequal
egalitarianism: A preliminary study of discourses concerning gender and
employment opportunities, British Journal
of Social Psychology, 26, 59-72.