

Beschreibung
This volume critically interrogates the dominant understanding of 'addiction' and 'addicts'. It examines the proliferation of the addiction concept by psychiatry and other psy-professions, exploring the processes and underlying drivers of this form of medical...This volume critically interrogates the dominant understanding of 'addiction' and 'addicts'. It examines the proliferation of the addiction concept by psychiatry and other psy-professions, exploring the processes and underlying drivers of this form of medicalisation. Through discussions from leading scholars in the field on gambling, smoking, opioids, and drug use, as well as the passionate engagement with social media, sport, sex, pornography, opioids, and psychedelics, the collection argues that addiction is better understood as a sociological rather than psychiatric phenomenon. It contends that the discourse of addiction is fundamentally political in nature, rather than purely medical. In doing so, this timely collection fills a significant gap in academic knowledge. It will be of strong interest to scholars and students of mental health and addiction, as well as to critical practitioners working in these areas.
Includes analysis of passionate behaviours which have not yet been medicalised including sport, work, and social media Discusses new empirical work on 'addictions', including psychedelics, pornography, opioids, and gambling Provides the first social constructionist volume on the medicalisation of passionate behaviours and 'addictions'
Autorentext
Bruce M. Z. Cohen is an Associate Professor in sociology at the University of Auckland, New Zealand.
Martin Harbusch is Professor for research methods at the University of Siegen, Germany.
Jo Reichertz is Emeritus Professor of sociology and communication science at the University Duisburg-Essen, Germany.
Klappentext
We desperately need a more intelligent, thoughtful and sociologically literate conversation about addiction, and this important book is a significant part of that.
Johann Hari , author of Chasing the Scream: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs
I absolutely loved this book! Hugely impressive project; it's going to be a fantastic contribution to the field.
Gerda Reith , Professor of Social Science, University of Glasgow, UK
This timely book brings together a thought-provoking collection of theoretical and empirical analyses, demonstrating the unique value of sociological approaches to addiction in its contemporary and multiplying forms.
Helen Keane , Professor of Sociology, Australian National University, Australia
'The critical perspectives articulated in this book demand an answer to the question 'does addiction science cause unintended harm by reinforcing historic power
Inequalities?'. The book will help addiction researchers across all disciplines to navigate the uncertainties raised by these questions.
Lee Hogarth , Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Exeter, UK
This volume critically interrogates the dominant understanding of 'addiction' and 'addicts'. It examines the proliferation of the addiction concept by psychiatry and other psy-professions, exploring the processes and underlying drivers of this form of medicalisation. Through discussions from leading scholars in the field on gambling, smoking, opioids, and drug use, as well as the passionate engagement with social media, sport, sex, pornography, opioids, and psychedelics, the collection argues that addiction is better understood as a sociological rather than psychiatric phenomenon. It contends that the discourse of addiction is fundamentally political in nature, rather than purely medical. In doing so, this timely collection fills a significant gap in academic knowledge. It will be of strong interest to scholars and students of mental health and addiction, as well as to critical practitioners working in these areas.
Bruce M. Z. Cohen is an Associate Professor in sociology at the University of Auckland, New Zealand.
Martin Harbusch is Professor for research methods at the University of Siegen, Germany.
Jo Reichertz is Emeritus Professor of sociology and communication science at the University Duisburg-Essen, Germany.
Inhalt
Foreword Peter J. Adams.- 1: Introduction: Pathologising pleasure? Bruce M. Z. Cohen, Martin Harbusch & Jo Reichertz.- PART 1: THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES.- 2: The ecological niche of behavioural addictions Baptiste Brossard, Emmanuelle Larocque, Nicolas Moreau, Dahlia Namian & Mélissa Roy.- 3: The triangle of medicalisation: Pathways for interactive negotiation of diseases, disorders and addictions Martin Harbusch.- 4: The communicative construction of addiction Jo Reichertz.- 5: A Marxist theory of addiction Bruce M. Z. Cohen.- PART 2: NEGOTIATING 'ADDICTION'.- 6: The social construction of 'good' and 'bad' addicts: How relabelling addiction shaped the opioid epidemic Thaddeus Müller.- 7: Excessive appetites and disarming innovations: The shifting socio-materialities of nicotine and gambling addiction Mark Elam.- 8: 'Addiction' and agency at the threshold of infinite pornographic access Kris Taylor.- PART 3: CONSPICUOUS BEHAVIOURS AS 'ADDICTIONS'.- 9: Wellness, addiction and temperance Richard Hammersley.- 10: Using sports: Constructing extremity as addiction Lars Arntsen & Nancy D. Campbell.- 11: From medicalisation to cultural embrace: Drug foundationalism versus techné in the psychedelic revival Tehseen Noorani.- PART 4: MEDIA, POLITICAL AND PUBLIC DISCOURSE.- 12: Addiction discoveries: Hyping and spinning the superiority of neuroscience Matilda Hellman.- 13: Social media, dark patterns and contemporary discourses of addiction Cherie Lacey, Ian Goodwin & Antonia Lyons.- 14: The instrumentalization of the concept of 'gambling addiction': A discourse analysis of German parliamentary debates Gerd Möll.- 15: Aesthetic pathologisation: Cinema, psychiatry and sex addiction Baptiste Brossard & Benjamin Hemmings.
