Why We Take Drugs

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A01=Tom Yardley
anthropological drug studies
Appropriative Attitude
Author_Tom Yardley
Category=JBFN2
Category=JHB
Category=JHMC
Contemporary Society
cultural attitudes intoxication
drug use
drugs
drugs and community
Ecstasy Tablets
Embodied Conception
Embodied Event
embodied experience
embodiment
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Free Expenditure
Gemeinschaft Form
Gesellschaft Form
human universals
ideal of modernity
Individuated Body
Intoxicant Drug
Intoxicated Body
intoxication of social space
intoxication phenomenology
Liminal Communities
Liminal Encounters
liminality and community
Lived Present
Magic Mushrooms
Mambila
moral panic
Non-rational Experiences
phenomenological analysis of drug experience
positive drug use
Primordial Necessities
Rhizomic Interaction
ritual drug use
Sacrificial Gesture
Singular Temporality
social taboos substances
sociology of drug use
Stand Point
substance abuse
substance use
Temporal Experience
Tom Yardley
transgressive economy of drugs
Transgressive Event
Vice Versa
war on drugs
Why we take drugs
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138020078
  • Weight: 330g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Jan 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In older cultures, the use of intoxicant drugs was integrated into the rhythms of social existence and bounded by rituals and taboos that ensured their dangerous forces were contained and channelled. In modern western societies, by contrast, the state and the institutions of society have washed their hands of any responsibility for assimilating the desire for intoxication into social existence, and by doing so have sponsored a free-for-all that has often had disastrous consequences for individuals and communities alike.

Why We Take Drugs provides a timely intervention in the growing debate about the wisdom of the ongoing ‘war on drugs’. Rather than adopting the assumption that drug and alcohol use is a problem that poses a threat to society, this book makes a case for the idea that society is a problem for intoxicant drug use and that it is society that poses a threat, by denying those who seek intoxication a legitimate and socially sanctioned space in which to experience these altered states. Scholarly yet approachable, it provides a new understanding of the meaning and role of intoxicant drug use in contemporary society, setting an in-depth phenomenological analysis of intoxication as an embodied experience within a wide sociological, anthropological and historical context. These ideas are brought to life by intimate and revealing accounts of ordinary drug users’ experiences with a wide range of substances.

This book will appeal to a wide range of students and scholars throughout the social sciences, particularly in the areas of drug and alcohol studies, body studies, cultural studies, anthropology and philosophy.

Tom Yardley is currently working on a collaborative project looking at the changing boundaries and new convergences between prescription medicines, herbal remedies and legal and illegal recreational drugs.

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