On social plasticity: the transformative power of pharmaceuticals on health, nature and identity

This article proposes a theoretical framework on the role of pharmaceuticals in transforming perspectives and shaping contemporary subjectivities. It outlines the significant role drugs play in three fundamental processes of social transformation in Western societies: medicalisation, molecularisatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sociology of health & illness 2016-01, Vol.38 (1), p.73-89
1. Verfasser: Collin, Johanne
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description This article proposes a theoretical framework on the role of pharmaceuticals in transforming perspectives and shaping contemporary subjectivities. It outlines the significant role drugs play in three fundamental processes of social transformation in Western societies: medicalisation, molecularisation and biosocialisation. Indeed, drugs can be envisaged as major devices of a pharmaceutical regime, which is more akin to the notion of dispositif, as used by Foucault, than to the sole result of high‐level scheming by powerful economic interests, a notion which informs a significant share of the literature. Medications serve as a key vector of the transformation of perspective (or gaze) that characterises medicalisation, molecularisation and biosocialisation, by shifting our view on health, nature and identity from a categorical to a dimensional framework. Hence, central to this thesis is that the same underlying mechanism is at work. Indeed, in all three processes there is an evolving polarity between two antinomic categories, the positions of which are constantly being redefined by the various uses of drugs. Due to their concreteness, the fluidity of their use and the plasticity of the identities they authorise, drugs colonise all areas of contemporary social experiences, far beyond the medical sphere. A video of this article can be found at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djIBY7DHKW4&feature=youtu.be
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subjects biomedicine
biopolitics
Drug Therapy
Drugs
drugs and medication
Health Status
Humans
Hypertension - drug therapy
Identity
medicalisation
Medicalization
Medicine
Menstrual Cycle - drug effects
Nature
norms and values
Original
Pharmaceutical Preparations
pharmaceuticalisation
Pharmaceuticals
Public health
Shyness
Social change
Social Identification
Social identity
Social Norms
Social power
Social psychology
Socialization
Western Hemisphere
title On social plasticity: the transformative power of pharmaceuticals on health, nature and identity
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