Livre
Ecstasy and the rise of the chemical generation
(L'ecstasy et la montée de la génération chimique)
Auteur(s) :
HAMMERSLEY, R. ;
KHAN, F. ;
DITTON, J.
Année
2002
Page(s) :
172 p.
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Éditeur(s) :
London : Routledge
ISBN :
978-0-415-27041-3
Refs biblio. :
16
Domaine :
Drogues illicites / Illicit drugs
Discipline :
PRO (Produits, mode d'action, méthode de dépistage / Substances, action mode, screening methods)
Thésaurus géographique
ROYAUME-UNI
;
ECOSSE
Thésaurus mots-clés
MDMA-ECSTASY
;
TYPE D'USAGE
;
PREMIER USAGE
;
CONSOMMATION
;
SEXUALITE
;
STYLE DE VIE
;
TEMOIGNAGE
;
SEVRAGE
;
EFFET SECONDAIRE
;
ENQUETE
;
POPULATION CACHEE
Note générale :
London, Routledge, 2002, 172 p.
Résumé :
ENGLISH :
Drug users are no longer a mad, bad or immoral minority. Using drugs is normal for the chemical generation, and the drug that defines them is ecstasy. This book about ecstasy users' lives is based on one of the biggest government-funded projects ever undertaken and gives voice to the chemical generation for the first time. The effects of the manufacture, distribution and use of ecstasy are now being felt across much of the globe. In the UK, where the study was conducted, over fifty per cent of young people use drugs, a quarter of them regularly. The people in this book are ordinary, decent, family-loving people, with normal lives, normal problems and normal aspirations. Through their own words we hear how they first started using ecstasy, how they use it in different ways, why clubbing and raving are so important, how good sex is on ecstasy, how they chill out, how they come down, what problems they have encountered and why they quit. And what happened to these normal people when they used ecstasy? Nothing. Yet. This path-breaking book ends by trying to answer the question on the lips of every member of the chemical generation: what are the long-term effects of ecstasy? Because we can't answer them, the authors claim, we are failing in our duty to our children: telling them not to take ecstasy is as alienating as it is pointless. This book reports two of the three separate studies of the use of ecstasy undertaken by the authors during the 1990s.The major study (which is reported in the five main chapters) compromised quantitative interviews with 229 ecstasy users, 22 of whom were interviewed qualitatively and in depths. (Extract of the publication)
Drug users are no longer a mad, bad or immoral minority. Using drugs is normal for the chemical generation, and the drug that defines them is ecstasy. This book about ecstasy users' lives is based on one of the biggest government-funded projects ever undertaken and gives voice to the chemical generation for the first time. The effects of the manufacture, distribution and use of ecstasy are now being felt across much of the globe. In the UK, where the study was conducted, over fifty per cent of young people use drugs, a quarter of them regularly. The people in this book are ordinary, decent, family-loving people, with normal lives, normal problems and normal aspirations. Through their own words we hear how they first started using ecstasy, how they use it in different ways, why clubbing and raving are so important, how good sex is on ecstasy, how they chill out, how they come down, what problems they have encountered and why they quit. And what happened to these normal people when they used ecstasy? Nothing. Yet. This path-breaking book ends by trying to answer the question on the lips of every member of the chemical generation: what are the long-term effects of ecstasy? Because we can't answer them, the authors claim, we are failing in our duty to our children: telling them not to take ecstasy is as alienating as it is pointless. This book reports two of the three separate studies of the use of ecstasy undertaken by the authors during the 1990s.The major study (which is reported in the five main chapters) compromised quantitative interviews with 229 ecstasy users, 22 of whom were interviewed qualitatively and in depths. (Extract of the publication)
Affiliation :
Univ. of Essex
Royaume-Uni. United Kingdom.
Royaume-Uni. United Kingdom.
Cote :
L00849
Historique