Literature DB >> 17997090

Privileging pleasure: temazepam injection in a heroin marketplace.

Robyn Dwyer1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Pleasure and its pursuit provide the key explanatory frame in this ethnographic analysis of temazepam injection among a set of drug injectors who enthusiastically embrace high-risk practices. The foregrounding of pleasure challenges key assumptions of harm reduction: namely, the 'rational' subject and the privileging of health as a universal good. In this paper I problematise the concepts of pleasure and conventional understandings of rationality. Interrogating these concepts through the actions and accounts of temazepam injectors, I argue that the model of the subject implicit in harm reduction does not sufficiently account for their everyday social practices.
METHODS: The paper draws on ethnographic research among heroin user/sellers of Vietnamese ethnicity in a local Australian heroin marketplace.
RESULTS: Temazepam was used in combination with heroin to enhance the experience of intoxication. Intense intoxication was desired for the pleasurable bodily sensations and emotional feelings it produced. The transgressive and dangerous nature of the practice added to its pleasure. Injection of temazepam capsules was also one of the practices constituting as well as expressing central social and cultural processes of heroin use in this particular social field.
CONCLUSION: Despite embodied awareness of the harms associated with temazepam injection, these people were prepared to sacrifice 'health' for the pleasures they perceived to be afforded by injecting the gel capsules. My ethnographic analysis suggests that if harm reduction is to respond to high-risk practices such as these, then attention needs to be paid to the pleasures people derive from their practices, and to the social and cultural values these constitute and express.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17997090     DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2007.09.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Drug Policy        ISSN: 0955-3959


  6 in total

1.  The epidemiology of benzodiazepine misuse: A systematic review.

Authors:  Victoria R Votaw; Rachel Geyer; Maya M Rieselbach; R Kathryn McHugh
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend       Date:  2019-05-07       Impact factor: 4.492

2.  High enhancer, downer, withdrawal helper: Multifunctional nonmedical benzodiazepine use among young adult opioid users in New York City.

Authors:  Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Lauren Jessell; Elizabeth Goodbody; Dongah Kim; Krista Gile; Jennifer Teubl; Cassandra Syckes; Kelly Ruggles; Jeffrey Lazar; Sam Friedman; Honoria Guarino
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2017-05-31

3.  New injectors and the social context of injection initiation.

Authors:  Alex Harocopos; Lloyd A Goldsamt; Paul Kobrak; John J Jost; Michael C Clatts
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2008-09-13

4.  The Role of Impulsivity and Sensitivity to Reward in Dropout of Addiction Treatment in Heroin Addicts.

Authors:  Abbas Bakhshipour-Rudsari; Alireza Karimpour-Vazifehkhorani
Journal:  Addict Health       Date:  2021-01

5.  Social influences upon injection initiation among street-involved youth in Vancouver, Canada: a qualitative study.

Authors:  Will Small; Danya Fast; Andrea Krusi; Evan Wood; Thomas Kerr
Journal:  Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy       Date:  2009-04-30

Review 6.  Dependence liability of lormetazepam: are all benzodiazepines equal? The case of the new i.v. lormetazepam for anesthetic procedures.

Authors:  Reinhard Horowski
Journal:  J Neural Transm (Vienna)       Date:  2020-05-28       Impact factor: 3.575

  6 in total

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