Drugs and Culture: New Perspectives Editors: Beatriz Caiuby Labate, Sandra Goulart, Maurício Fiore, Edward MacRae and Henrique Carneiro - Researchers of NEIP (Interdisciplinary Group for Psychoactive Studies, www.neip.info).
Publisher: EDUFBA Summary: There is an excess of topics related
to the theme of “drugs” that are not related with the Dionysian
or with any notion of “abuse” or overdose. They deal with
an abundance of clichés, prejudices, moralism, and fixed ideas.
Few topics nowadays touch upon as many taboos and prohibitions as that
of psychoactive drugs. This rule of thumb does not apply to all psychoactive
drugs however. Rather, it generally concerns those prohibited by law or
condemned by the dominant morality, by conventional psychology, and by
medicine. An enormous quantity of legal drugs produced by the pharmaceutical
industry lives side by side with illicit drugs that generate around themselves
a powerful international war that mobilizes states and networks of traffickers
who hold global influence. Traditional uses of age-old drugs simultaneously
exist with new practices related to these substances. And in any case,
the literature that deals with the “question of drugs” is
not accustomed to go beyond the narrow field that goes from medical works
of a largely conservative nature, passes through the books of law, and
ends with the often sensationalistic journalistic reports. Until recently,
the social sciences formed a disciplinary space occupied by a few brave
efforts to study “drugs,” but these few efforts were surrounded
by an overbearing silence. The book Drugs and Culture: New Perspectives,
the result of a symposium organized by the Interdisciplinary Group for
Psychoactive Studies (NEIP, www.neip.info) and that took place at the
Universidade de São Paulo in 2005, represents an important push
by researchers in the areas of anthropology, sociology, political sciences,
law, and history to approach the topic of “drugs” from multiple
angles and who have as their common ground the staunch criticism of the
prohibition of these substances. Comprising seventeen articles, besides
a preface and an introduction, the volume is organized into three parts:
“The history of drug consumption and prohibition in the West,”
with four articles that reflect on the history and logic of the current
day prohibitionist regime; “The use of drugs as a cultural phenomenon,”
with three articles that examine the role of interdisciplinarity in the
analysis of psychoactive substances; and “The use of drugs: cultural
diversity in perspective,” which covers the majority of the texts
in the collection and approaches the topic of drugs from the perspectives
of different fields such as anthropology, ethnology and history. The work
offers an ample spectrum of approaches that constructs points of convergence
and dialogue, and which creates zones of tension that are evident in the
lack of consensus and composure that is common when dealing with a question
like that at hand. This book serves as a reference for those who do not
align themselves with what has already been published about “drugs”
and who feel enough discomfort to be propelled to seek out other angles,
viewpoints, and ideas on the topic. (Thiago Rodrigues) [Translated to
English by Brian Anderson]. Contact: >>início
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