The Fix
By (Author) Damian Thompson
HarperCollins Publishers
Collins
2nd April 2013
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Cultural studies
362.29
Paperback
288
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 20mm
230g
Addictions to iphones, painkillers, cupcakes, alcohol and sex are taking over our lives.
Our most casual daily habits can quickly become obsessions that move beyond our control. Damian Thompson, who has himself struggled with a range of addictions, argues that human desire is in the process of being reshaped. Shunning the concept of addiction as disease, he shows how manufacturers are producing substances like ipads, muffins and computer games that we learn to like too much and supplement tradition addictions to alcohol, drugs and gambling. He argues that addictive behaviour is becoming a substitute for family and work bonds that are being swept away by globalisation and urbanisation.
This battle to control addiction will soon overshadow familiar ideological debates about how to run the economy, and as whole societies set about fixing themselves, the architecture of human relations will come under strain as never before.
The Fix offers a truly frightening glimpse of the future and is essential reading for fans of Naomi Kleins No Logo, Oliver Jamess Affluenza and Francis Wheens How Mumbo-jumbo Conquered the World.
Blackly funny, intellectually serious and compellingly readable. FIVE STARS MICHAEL GOVE, Mail on Sunday
Fleet-footed, frighteningly up-to-date an argument with real force and substance Washington Post
Thompsons book is a tour de force, written with wit and lan, but more than that, it is a delicate dissection of what it means to be addicted to something; what it is to feel out of control and beholden to something to anaesthetise you from the realities of your life. Its agonisingly honest and personal in parts but without ever seeming mawkish or self-pitying, drawing on his personal experiences of addiction to give texture and insight. FIVE STARS MAX PEMBERTON, The Telegraph
Thompsons key thesis is that addiction should be thought of as behaviour, not disease. I am a practicing clinical psychologist professor of clinical psychology at the University of Liverpool and this is a philosophy with which I profoundly agree. Thompson has been able to put into words to explain not only why we tend to get addicted to harmful things, but also how we've got our collective thinking about these issues so wrong for so long. It's a book I wish I had been skilful enough to write. The Fix is an excellent read. Its bold and confident and, pretty much, right. PROFESSOR PETER KINDERMAN, Head of the Institute of Psychology, Health and Society at the University of Liverpool
Damian Thompson is a recovering alcoholic who continues to wrestle with an addiction to collecting Classical CDs. Hes the editor of the Daily Telegraph blogs, a lead columnist in print in the Saturday Telegraph, used to be the director of the Catholic Herald and has been described by the Church Times as a blood-crazed ferret.@HolySmoke