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Auteur M. MOLONEY |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur (7)
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G. HUNT ; M. MOLONEY ; A. FAZIO | 2014
Dans Substance Use and Misuse (Vol.49, n°8, 2014) Article : PériodiqueIn recent years, there has been increasing concern about youthful "binge" drinking and intoxication. Yet the meaning of intoxication remains under-theorized. This paper examines intoxication in a young adult nightlife scene, using data from a 20[...]Another example of the centrality of pleasure can be found in the rise of the dance/rave scene and its associated "club drug" (particularly "ecstasy") use, documented by Hunt and his colleagues in this chapter. As a way of illustrating key cultu[...]Moloney and Hunt continue the focus on club drugs and raves, but shift the emphasis to issues of identity, specifically gender identity. Rather than focusing on gender as one variable in the risk-equation for drug use, they instead examine the w[...]Cet article a pour but d'examiner l'accomplissement des genres dans le contexte des soirées techno. L'analyse de témoignages montre que la consommation d'ecstasy dans ce contexte social permet d'accroître la fluidité des genres et de multiplier [...]G. HUNT ; M. MOLONEY ; ELISAD, Organisateur de réunion ; Epidemiology meets cultural studies: studying and understanding youth cultures, clubs and drugs (9-11 October 2008; Torino, Italy) ; K. EVANS | 2008
CongrèsENGLISH : The public perceptions of clubs and drugs reveals the existence of two opposing discourses. One, an official discourse, characterizes dance events and taking drugs as spaces of "excess risk", which need to be controlled and regulated[...]A. FAZIO ; G. HUNT ; M. MOLONEY | 2011
Dans Qualitative Health Research (Vol.21, n°5, May 2011) Article : PériodiqueResearch on drug use among gay and bisexual men has primarily focused on examining the link between drug use - most notably, methamphetamine - sexual practices, and risk of HIV transmission. Drawing on in-depth qualitative data from 40 interview[...]ENGLISH: Drugs and music have long been tied together. From marijuana and jazz, and amphetamines and punk, drugs and popular music have been inextricably joined. Today the music is electronic and ecstasy and party drugs are the drugs of choice.[...]