Recognising life: A study in the atheist micro-bio-politics of drugs
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Recognising life : A study in the atheist micro-bio-politics of drugs. / Nissen, Morten.
I: Subjectivity: international journal of critical psychology, Bind 6, 2013, s. 193-211.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Recognising life
T2 - A study in the atheist micro-bio-politics of drugs
AU - Nissen, Morten
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - The author attempts a micro-bio-politics of drugs, starting from an excerpt of an interview with a couple of young drug users in a Copenhagen social youth work facility that pushes harm reduction in 1996. The article is guided by Derrida’s idea of ‘drugs as the religion of atheist poets’ – that the contemporary discursive pragmatics of more or less pharmaceutical life practices still include forms of transcendence – and by the wish to fertilize the field of bio-politics with the indexical inter-subjectivity of the concept of ideology, as derived from an antiessentialist reading of Hegelian–Marxist traditions. The analysis unfolds as an ideology critique that reconstructs, and seeks ways to overcome, particular forms of recognition that are identifiable in the data and in the field of drug practices, and how these form part of the constitution of singular collectives and participants – in these life practices, but also in the research practice that engaged with them through the interview.
AB - The author attempts a micro-bio-politics of drugs, starting from an excerpt of an interview with a couple of young drug users in a Copenhagen social youth work facility that pushes harm reduction in 1996. The article is guided by Derrida’s idea of ‘drugs as the religion of atheist poets’ – that the contemporary discursive pragmatics of more or less pharmaceutical life practices still include forms of transcendence – and by the wish to fertilize the field of bio-politics with the indexical inter-subjectivity of the concept of ideology, as derived from an antiessentialist reading of Hegelian–Marxist traditions. The analysis unfolds as an ideology critique that reconstructs, and seeks ways to overcome, particular forms of recognition that are identifiable in the data and in the field of drug practices, and how these form part of the constitution of singular collectives and participants – in these life practices, but also in the research practice that engaged with them through the interview.
KW - Faculty of Social Sciences
KW - subjectivity
KW - Recognition
KW - collectivity
KW - addiction
U2 - 10.1057/sub.2012.25
DO - 10.1057/sub.2012.25
M3 - Journal article
VL - 6
SP - 193
EP - 211
JO - Subjectivity
JF - Subjectivity
SN - 1755-6341
ER -
ID: 45824521