What's Wrong With Addiction
By (Author) Helen Keane
Melbourne University Press
Melbourne University Press
15th May 2002
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Addiction and therapy
Psychology
616.86
Paperback
236
Width 161mm, Height 232mm, Spine 18mm
312g
Addicts are generally regarded with either pity or grave disapproval. But is being addicted to something necessarily bad We categorise addiction as unnatural, diseased and self-destructive. We demonise pleasure and desire, and view the addict as physically and morally damaged. In asserting that the 'wrongness' of addiction is not fixed or indeed obvious, Helen Keane presents a refreshing challenge to more conventional accounts of addiction. She also investigates the notion that people can be addicted to eating, love and sex, just as they are to drugs and alcohol. What's Wrong with Addiction shows that most of our ideas about addiction take certain ideals of health and normality for granted. It exposes strains in our society's oppositions between health and disease, between the natural and the artificial, between order and disorder, and between self and other.
This is an impressive work: carefully structured, researched and written... a refreshingly lucid account that is both intellectually stimulating and professionally helpful. Janet McCalman
Helen Keane is a research fellow at the National Centre in HIV Social Research, University of New South Wales, Sydney.