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DARG was started in Mick Billig's office on a Wednesday afternoon late
November 1987. The people present included Derek Edwards, Mike Gane, Jonathan Potter, Dave Middleton, Nigel Edley
and Ros Gill. We spent some
time discussing the name and its acronymic connotations (LIAR - the
Loughborough Ideology and Rhetoric group was a popular alternative).
However, Discourse and Rhetoric seemed to pull together some core interests.
It was never intended as a formal research centre, with a head, membership,
a budget and so on. It was primarily a vehicle for generating discussion at
the intersection of a number of interests in discourse, rhetoric, activity
and conversation. There was no common agenda or statement of beliefs.
Indeed, in line with the rhetorical position we saw it as a creative arena
for argument. Our aim was to create a research culture that would be
informal, entertaining but also challenging.
At first it was just meetings in Mick's office, every Wednesday at 1.00, to
look at some interview extracts (we were very fond of interviews then) or
discuss some big issue (realism, discourse and ideology, interpretative
repertoires vs. discourses). After an hour or so of that we would go for
coffee somewhere and carry on arguing, (and gossiping, complaining,
plotting and all the usual stuff).
Throughout the 90s the group expanded. It wasn't long before we couldn't
fit in Mick's office, and we tried a range of venues before moving into a
large dedicated room. The University supported DARG with space and
equipment money and we moved into some splendid accommodation (Hut P1)
which provided research space for postgraduates, for transcription equipment, and for a seminar area. From an original complement of two
postgraduates we started to get people wanting to do research at DARG from
all round the world (DARG has had postgraduates from Argentina, Brazil, Canada,
Finland, Germany, Holland, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, and the US).
During the 90s new staff arrived who added their own ingredients to DARG. Most notable
were (are) Malcolm Ashmore, Sue Wilkinson, Celia Kitzinger (now at the University of York), Charles Antaki and
Steve Brown (now at the University of Leicester); in the 2000s we were joined by John Cromby, Alexa Hepburn, Liz Stokoe, Abi Locke (now at Huddersfield University), John E. Richardson, Cristian Tileaga and, in 2010, by Carly Butler. Each has reinvigorated DARG and pushed it in new directions. We
have had an illustrious and exciting set of international visitors over the
years, some passing through, some staying a few weeks or months.
Towards the end of the 90s DARG grew out of its old facilities. Some
lunchtimes more than 30 people were cramming into the seminar room. So we
split things up. The technical equipment was moved to a new dedicated
laboratory. In 2009 the DARG meetings moved into a large, airy seminar room with excellent video and audio facilities, making our lunchtime discussions still more enjoyable - and we still meet every
Wednesday at 1.00 in term time. More importantly, we still keep to the original vision of
nurturing a research culture that is led by ideas - rather than money or
ambition. We like it.
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