Exploring the micro-politics of normalisation: Narratives of pleasure, self-control and desire in a sample of young Australian ‘party drug’ users

This article explores the micro-politics of recreational use of illicit ‘party drugs’ in a social networkof young Australians. These young people often engage in extended sessions of concurrent alcoholand other drug use, and regularly emphasise the pleasures associated with this use. However,as well...

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Main Authors: Pennay, Amy, Moore, David
Format: Journal Article
Published: Routledge 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16114
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author Pennay, Amy
Moore, David
author_facet Pennay, Amy
Moore, David
author_sort Pennay, Amy
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This article explores the micro-politics of recreational use of illicit ‘party drugs’ in a social networkof young Australians. These young people often engage in extended sessions of concurrent alcoholand other drug use, and regularly emphasise the pleasures associated with this use. However,as well-integrated young people, they are also exposed to the discourses of non-using friends, familyand the wider society, which represent illicit drug use as a potential moral threat. Some group membersinvoked the need for self-control in relation to illicit drug use and had developed a number of strategiesto cease or regulate their use. However, they struggled to regulate pleasure and drew on popularunderstandings of ‘excessive’ drug use as indicative of flawed neo-liberal subjectivity. Other groupmembers rejected the need for self-control, choosing instead to emphasise the value of unrestrainedbodily pleasure facilitated by the heavy use of illicit drugs. These co-existing discourses point to thecomplex ways in which illicit drug users try to challenge the stigma associated with their drug use.Our analysis suggests that future accounts of illicit drug use, and harm reduction initiatives, need to bemore attentive to the micro-politics of normalisation. How should harm reduction respond to thosewho articulate its ethos but pursue pleasure in practice? What should harm reduction say to thosewho reject regulation on the grounds that it stifles pleasure? Discussing ways to incorporate pleasureinto harm reduction should be central to the future development of policy and practice.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-161142017-09-13T14:05:40Z Exploring the micro-politics of normalisation: Narratives of pleasure, self-control and desire in a sample of young Australian ‘party drug’ users Pennay, Amy Moore, David self-control pleasure Australia Normalisation party drugs ethnography This article explores the micro-politics of recreational use of illicit ‘party drugs’ in a social networkof young Australians. These young people often engage in extended sessions of concurrent alcoholand other drug use, and regularly emphasise the pleasures associated with this use. However,as well-integrated young people, they are also exposed to the discourses of non-using friends, familyand the wider society, which represent illicit drug use as a potential moral threat. Some group membersinvoked the need for self-control in relation to illicit drug use and had developed a number of strategiesto cease or regulate their use. However, they struggled to regulate pleasure and drew on popularunderstandings of ‘excessive’ drug use as indicative of flawed neo-liberal subjectivity. Other groupmembers rejected the need for self-control, choosing instead to emphasise the value of unrestrainedbodily pleasure facilitated by the heavy use of illicit drugs. These co-existing discourses point to thecomplex ways in which illicit drug users try to challenge the stigma associated with their drug use.Our analysis suggests that future accounts of illicit drug use, and harm reduction initiatives, need to bemore attentive to the micro-politics of normalisation. How should harm reduction respond to thosewho articulate its ethos but pursue pleasure in practice? What should harm reduction say to thosewho reject regulation on the grounds that it stifles pleasure? Discussing ways to incorporate pleasureinto harm reduction should be central to the future development of policy and practice. 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16114 10.3109/16066350903308415 Routledge restricted
spellingShingle self-control
pleasure
Australia
Normalisation
party drugs
ethnography
Pennay, Amy
Moore, David
Exploring the micro-politics of normalisation: Narratives of pleasure, self-control and desire in a sample of young Australian ‘party drug’ users
title Exploring the micro-politics of normalisation: Narratives of pleasure, self-control and desire in a sample of young Australian ‘party drug’ users
title_full Exploring the micro-politics of normalisation: Narratives of pleasure, self-control and desire in a sample of young Australian ‘party drug’ users
title_fullStr Exploring the micro-politics of normalisation: Narratives of pleasure, self-control and desire in a sample of young Australian ‘party drug’ users
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the micro-politics of normalisation: Narratives of pleasure, self-control and desire in a sample of young Australian ‘party drug’ users
title_short Exploring the micro-politics of normalisation: Narratives of pleasure, self-control and desire in a sample of young Australian ‘party drug’ users
title_sort exploring the micro-politics of normalisation: narratives of pleasure, self-control and desire in a sample of young australian ‘party drug’ users
topic self-control
pleasure
Australia
Normalisation
party drugs
ethnography
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16114