Acknowledgements
Introduction: Doing drug research in more-than-human worlds
Chapter 1: Approaching bodies: ‘Becoming-with’
Chapter 2: Thinking bodies: Conceptualising pleasure and not-so-pleasurable concepts
Chapter 3: Practicing bodies: ‘On the tilt’: The injecting event and the fragility of pleasure among other affects
Chapter 4: Living bodies: Vital becomings: Becoming-normal, -other and –blocked with drugs
Chapter 5: Intervening-with bodies: Troubling recovery: Mediating habits and doing more than harm reduction
Conclusion: Empowering bodies: Making bodies better?
Appendix
Bibliography
Fay Dennis is a Wellcome Trust Research Fellow in Social Science and Bioethics in the Department of Sociology at Goldsmiths, University of London.
How should drugs, pleasures, harms and problems be interrogated in the more-than-human worlds of affects, signs, technologies and bodies that dominate contemporary life in the Anthropocene? Dennis’ timely new book leads the reader through these worlds, abandoning the verities of subjectivity, control and rationality in favour of a far more mysterious account of assemblages, affects and pleasures, health and becoming. The result is a powerful new vision of social science, and a compelling new model of harm reduction for the more-than-human to come. Cameron Duff, RMIT UniversityHow do we do injecting bodies? And how can we do them better? Inventing new methods and concepts to address harm reduction from within, Fay Dennis develops an alternative methodological approach to doing social scientific drugs research, thinking with drug use and engaging drug treatment and policy. The contribution of this path-breaking research lies with its capacity to bring the habits, pleasures and contexts of drug users experience into presence, so that we can learn from them and transform the lives of drug users. Injecting Bodies in More-than-Human Worlds breathes new life into an important area of health research that has been overshadowed by a discourse of addiction and dependency. Nicole Vitellone, University of Liverpool Dennis’ book makes an exciting and accessible contribution to the field of Critical Drug Studies, and should be essential reading for students and academics interested in fostering more rigorous and ethically responsible interventions and practices of knowledge-production around drug use. Bringing creative qualitative research into connection with post-structural and post-humanist concepts drawn from the work of Deleuze and Guattari and the fields of STS and New Materialisms, Dennis shows clearly the urgency and importance of developing more complex understandings of drugs, drug-using bodies and drug-related effects.Peta Malins, RMIT University
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