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  • Pleasure Consuming Medicine: The Queer Politics of Drugs

    Author(s): Kane Race
    Published: 2009
    Pages: 280
    Illustrations: 12 illustrations
  • Cloth: $84.95 - In Stock
    978-0-8223-4488-9
  • Paperback: $23.95 - In Stock
    978-0-8223-4501-5
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  • Preface  ix
    Acknowledgments  xvii
    1. Pleasure Consuming Medicine: An Introduction  1
    2. Prescribing the Self  32
    3. Recreational States  59
    4. Drugs and Domesticity: Fencing the Nation  80
    5. Consuming Compliance: Remembering Bodies Inhabit Pharmaceutical Narratives  106
    6. Embodiments of Safety  137
    7. Exceptional Sex: How Drugs Have Come to Mediate Sex in Gay Discourse  164
    Notes  191
    Selected Bibliography  229
    Index  245
  • “This book's clear prose makes a complex subject easily digestible. Race's book provides useful theoretical starting points for anyone considering gay community, discourses surrounding consumption of legal and illegal drugs, and pleasure and subjectivity. This is an important contribution to the field of queer theory and provides a catalyst for further work grounded in pleasure and embodiments.” —Jessica Rodgers, M/C Reviews

    Reviews

  • “This book's clear prose makes a complex subject easily digestible. Race's book provides useful theoretical starting points for anyone considering gay community, discourses surrounding consumption of legal and illegal drugs, and pleasure and subjectivity. This is an important contribution to the field of queer theory and provides a catalyst for further work grounded in pleasure and embodiments.” —Jessica Rodgers, M/C Reviews

  • Pleasure Consuming Medicine is one of the best examples of critical cultural studies I have read. The scholarship is truly stunning. Kane Race presents a highly original argument which extends thinking about several interconnected issues: HIV, drugs, drug culture, embodiment, medical governance, sexuality, and identities.”—Elspeth Probyn, Research SA Chair, The University of South Australia

    “Kane Race's Pleasure Consuming Medicine supplies what we have missed for so long: a radical but responsible exploration of both the ethics and the politics of pleasure. Exhilarating in its daring and its intelligence, startling in its originality yet completely sensible in its interpretations, the book unerringly describes the paradoxical world where we now live out the cruelties and ecstasies of human embodiment.”—David Halperin, author of Saint Foucault and What Do Gay Men Want?

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  • Description

    On a summer night in 2007, the Azure Party, part of Sydney’s annual gay and lesbian Mardi Gras, is underway. Alongside the party outfits, drugs, lights, and DJs is a volunteer care team trained to deal with the drug-related emergencies that occasionally occur. But when police appear at the gates with drug-detecting dogs, mild panic ensues. Some patrons down all their drugs, heightening their risk of overdose. Others try their luck at the gates. After twenty-six attendees are arrested with small quantities of illicit substances, the party is shut down and the remaining partygoers disperse into the city streets. For Kane Race, the Azure Party drug search is emblematic of a broader technology of power that converges on embodiment, consumption, and pleasure in the name of health. In Pleasure Consuming Medicine, he illuminates the symbolic role that the illicit drug user fulfills for the neoliberal state. As he demonstrates, the state’s performance of moral sovereignty around substances designated “illicit” bears little relation to the actual dangers of drug consumption; in fact, it exacerbates those dangers.

    Race does not suggest that drug use is risk-free, good, or bad, but rather that the regulation of drugs has become a site where ideological lessons about the propriety of consumption are propounded. He argues that official discourses about drug use conjure a space where the neoliberal state can be seen to be policing the “excesses” of the amoral market. He explores this normative investment in drug regimes and some “counterpublic health” measures that have emerged in response. These measures, which Race finds in certain pragmatic gay men’s health and HIV prevention practices, are not cloaked in moralistic language, and they do not cast health as antithetical to pleasure.

    About The Author(s)

    Kane Race is a Senior Lecturer in Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney.
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