Narcoféminismes : Repenser l'usage de drogues

Publications

Narcoféminismes : Repenser l'usage de drogues

15 août 2023
The Sociological Review
Fay Dennis
Kiran Pienaar

Dennis et al. présentent une série d'articles qui utilisent le concept de « narcoféminisme », un mouvement collectif de femmes usagères des drogues pour se mobiliser, lutter pour leur droit à l'autodétermination et faire entendre leur voix. Pour en savoir plus, en anglais, veuillez lire les informations ci-dessous.

Introduction

Narcofeminism and its multiples: From activism to everyday minoritarian worldbuilding

From the abstract: Sociology has a long-standing interest in the consumption of licit and illicit drugs, particularly as a feminist concern with scholars highlighting the ways in which drugs are used as regulatory technologies to control the conduct and subjectivities of women and other marginalised groups. This monograph flips the focus from a feminist sociological concern with drugs as a means of confining minoritised peoples, to explore what they can do as a feminist practice. Employing the drug-user activist concept of ‘narcofeminism’, it aims to rethink how drugs are conceived in sociology and chart their role in shaping selves and worlds. This article introduces the guiding philosophy of the narcofeminist movement as articulated in an interview we conducted with founding narcofeminist activists from Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Threaded through the interview are vivid examples of the ingrained and overlapping hostilities that differentially constitute drug consumption practices for women and gender minorities, and the brave acts of resistance they perform in response. In introducing the collection, we foreground a key aim that has guided its development: thinking with the insights of narcofeminism, we have sought to address the complexities of drug use and to hold in focus its potentialities both in terms of its harms and benefits, risks and rewards and, importantly, to reflect on how people navigate these counterposing forces in their situated practices of drug use. We also discuss how the collection advances the sociology of drugs by bridging disciplinary divides and disrupting binary distinctions between licit and illicit drugs, volition and compulsion, pleasure and pain, and discourse and practice, among others. This article provides an overview of the contributions that comprise the monograph, highlighting how they grapple with the ethico-political commitments of narcofeminism to rethink drug consumption as a mode of living, capable of transforming social worlds.

Narcofeminism – Living and responding at the margins

Living and responding at the margins: A conversation with narcofeminist activists

Narcofeminism: A feminist auto-ethnography on drugs (Restricted access)

Drugs and gender – Technologies of oppression and resistance

Refusing recovery, living a ‘wayward life’: A feminist analysis of women’s drug use

The drinking at home woman: Between alcohol harms and domestic experiments (Restricted access)

Acid feminism: Gender, psychonautics and the politics of consciousness

Technologies of abjection: The possessive logics and performative sovereignty of drug dog operations in New South Wales, Australia

Drugs and sexualities – Practices of care and connection

Drugs, techno and the ecstasy of queer bodies

Narcofeminist ‘chemsex’: Rethinking sexualised drug use in a shifting queer landscape marked by public health emergency (Restricted access)

Narcofeminist worldbuilding

Pleasure, drugs, materiality and tensions in harm reduction in practice: The case of safer injection programmes

Ambivalent pleasures: Towards narcofeminist alterlife (Restricted access)

Afterword: Tensions and possibilities for a narcofeminist sociology