Literature DB >> 23540297

Enacting multiple methamphetamines: the ontological politics of public discourse and consumer accounts of a drug and its effects.

Robyn Dwyer1, David Moore.   

Abstract

Over the last decade in Australia, methamphetamine has come to be seen as a significant issue for drug research, policy and practice. Concerns have been expressed over its potency, the increasing prevalence of its use and its potential for producing greater levels, and more severe forms, of harm compared to amphetamine or other drugs. In this article, we critically examine some of the ways in which methamphetamine and its effects are produced and reproduced within and through Australian public discourse, focusing in particular on the associations made between methamphetamine and psychosis. We show how public discourse enacts methamphetamine as an anterior, stable, singular and definite object routinely linked to the severe psychological 'harm' of psychosis. We contrast the enactment of methamphetamine within public discourse with how methamphetamine is enacted by consumers of the drug. In their accounts, consumers perform different methamphetamine objects and offer different interpretations of the relationships of these objects to psychological problems and of the ontological nature (i.e. relating to what is real, what is, what exists) of these problems. In examining public discourse and consumer accounts, we challenge conventional ontological understandings of methamphetamine as anterior, singular, stable and definite, and of its psychological effects as indicative of pathology. In line with recent critical social research on drugs, we draw on social studies of science and technology that focus on the performativity of scientific knowledge and material practices. We suggest that recognising the ontological contingency, and therefore the multiplicity, of methamphetamine offers a critical counterpoint to conventional research, policy and practice accounts of methamphetamine and its psychological effects.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23540297     DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2013.03.003

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


  4 in total

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Authors:  Maziyar Ghiabi
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2021-01-21

2.  "I was worried if I don't have a broken leg they might not take it seriously": Experiences of men accessing ambulance services for mental health and/or alcohol and other drug problems.

Authors:  Nyssa Ferguson; Michael Savic; Terence V McCann; Kate Emond; Emma Sandral; Karen Smith; Louise Roberts; Emma Bosley; Dan I Lubman
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2019-04-04       Impact factor: 3.377

3.  The constitution of the alcoholic self, communicative processes and administrative practices: On the varied uses of four terms denoting problematic drinking.

Authors:  Filip Roumeliotis; Frida Carlsson; Linn Johansson Erkenfelt; Lisa Wallander
Journal:  Nordisk Alkohol Nark       Date:  2020-11-24

4.  Overview: Exploring the onto-politics of cannabis.

Authors:  Thomas Friis Søgaard; Tuulia Lerkkanen
Journal:  Nordisk Alkohol Nark       Date:  2021-08-10
  4 in total

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