Title: Drinking, drugs and selfcontrol
1Drinking, drugs and self-control
- Robin Room
- robin.room_at_sorad.su.se
- Lecture, 27 September, 2005 Sociology Department,
University of Helsinki
2The symbolic power of substance use
- Positive symbolism of use
- Champagne celebration
- Positive symbolism of abstaining
- Marker of faith for Muslims, Mormons ...
- Negative symbolism of use or heavy use
- drunkard, dope field, alcoholic, drug
addict, dependent on drugs all stigmatized - Negative symbolism of abstaining
- wowser
- Variation by time and place in the symbolism
3Properties behind the symbolic power 1
- Valued physical goods
- Amenable to commodification, industrialization,
globalization - Access as a symbol of power and domination
- Use as a social behaviour
- A performance in front of others
- Demarcating the social groups boundaries of
inclusion/exclusion - Taken into body
- Intimate behaviour
- Fateful can contaminate poison, infection,
sin, spirit possession - Subject to prescriptions and taboos
4Properties behind the symbolic power 2
- Psychoactive power to affect thinking
behaviour - Intoxication, taking on out of oneself
- Valued and feared Double edge of terms
- pharmakon, drug, intoxication
- Intoxicated behaviour as unpredictable,
intractable, dangerous ? powerful - Causing addiction/dependence
- Enslavement, loss of control of drug use and of
life - So multiple underlays of symbolic power
- Symbolism in everyday life
- Emotive symbolism in political movements for
control - demon rum then, scourge now
5An example Kate Moss the coolest woman on
earthJess Cartner-Morley, Guardian, 15 Sept.
2005
- Sept. 14 chosen as guest editor for December
French Vogue - there is something magical about Kate -- Carine
Roitfeld, Vogue editor - Mosss influence over fashion grows by the
minute. She stalks the catwalks and corridors of
fashion power looking mischievous and haughty at
the same time, like Madame Pompadour, only
slightly less chaste.... Moss currently has two
public looks. One is accessorized with a
waistcoat, Pete Doherty, a bottle of beer and
sunglasses which hint at late, late nights the
other is elegant and decadent, in an F. Scott
Fitzgerald kind of way, all expensive evening
gowns and gin and tonics. The theme for Mosss
birthday party at Claridges, after all, was the
beautiful and the damned. (Cartner-Morley)
615 September Cocaine Kate
- The Daily Mirror publishes grainy camera-photo
stills of her chopping and snorting cocaine.
(Moss had previously won a libel suit against the
Sunday Mirror.) - As she parties on well into the early hours,
she chats merrily about her 2-year-old
daughter, looks unsteady and exhausted as the
session continues. - Between lines of cocaine, she repeatedly
twitches her nose and rubs her nostrils. - On five occasions she expertly prepares the
lines of coacine, carefully using a credit card
to cut the powder into neat lines for her,
Doherty and the others in the recording session. - ...Kate begins the night with shots of vodka and
whisky. - She then pours herself large glasses of wine and
beer and chain-smokes cigarettes.
7Cool Britain meets drug-hostile Sweden and U.S.
- 16 September Hennes and Mauritz, her biggest
contract, initially gives her a second chance - We strongly disapprove of her actions.... We
have strict rules for engaging models. They
should be healthy, wholesome and sound and we are
strongly against drug abuse and we have made
this clear to Kate Moss. After hearing her
explanation and her regret we have decided for
the time being to continue the campaign. HM
statement - There were quickly signs that the company had
misjudged the mood of the public, and some
sections of the media.... Stores were inundated
withh calls of protest, a worrying development in
conservative parts of America, where HM is
seeking to expand. A. Duval Smith, N. Mathiason
D. Smith, Observer 25 Sept. - 19 September After further tabloid revelations,
she is dropped by HM - After the feedback from customers and other
papers, we decided we should distance ourselves
for any kind of drug abuse - HM distances itself strongly from drugs and for
several years has been actively engaged in drug
prevention work with the Mentor Foundation. HM
statement - The man who fired supermodel Kate Moss ... Is a
Swedish billionaire obsessed with corporate
ethics and responsibility ... and a founding
trustee of a charity dedicated to fighting
drugs.... He would otherwise have faced severe
embarrassment from Mentor, a drugs prevention
organization fronted by the Swedish royal family
and supported by HM, which told The Observer
that Persson made the only decision possible....
HM is an image maker and an example to young
people. Smith, Mathiason Smith, 25 Sept.
8Falling dominoes
- 19 Sept Mirror quotes Moss as telling her
brother I dont need to go into rehab but Ill
have to or it wont look good. - 20-21 September Chanel, Burberry and Gloria
Vanderbilt drop Moss and the Metropolitan Police
announce an investigation of her drug use.
Speculation in press about cancellations of her
remaining modeling contracts. - 21 Sept. Moss is now expected to admit to
problems in her personal life and go speedily
into rehab as damage limitation, S. Menkes, HM
drops Moss from campaign, Intl Herald Tribune 21
Sep., p. 14.
9Various personal issues I need to address
- 21 September Mosss statement
- I take full responsibility for my actions.
- "I also accept that there are various personal
issues that I need to address and have started
taking the difficult, yet necessary, steps to
resolve them. - "I want to apologise to all of the people I have
let down because of my behaviour, which has
reflected badly on my family, friends,
co-workers, business associates and others. - "I am trying to be positive, and the support and
love I have received are invaluable. - Coty Beauty, which manages the Rimmel brand, puts
out a statement - "We are pleased to acknowledge the statement
released by Kate Moss today apologising for her
recent actions. We would like to express our
support for all those who undertake the often
difficult process of overcoming their problems. - 23 September Mirror publishes a commentary by
Corrine Sweet, psychologist and addiction
expert, and a short editorial - Sweet Saying sorry, and admitting shes going
to get help, means shes seeing clearly for the
first time in years. - Kate might not realise it yet, but she will look
back and realise that the day her drug abuse was
exposed was the best of her life. - Editorial Kate Moss has behaved incredibly
stupidly, but she now accepts that she has done
wrong. - Her public apology is welcome if overdue.
- Her cocaine abuse has cost her financially and
may even threaten her career. But Kate has
acknowledged that she needs help, and for that
she should be applauded. - 24 September Kate, who has publicly apologized
for her drug-taking, is due to check into a rehab
clinic today (M. Fricker, Horse drug Kate,
Mirror 24/9)
10The brand of her new ad campaign Recovery
- A television and cinema campaign for Rimmel, the
cosmetics manufacturer, was shot using Moss
just days before the scandal broke.... Rimmel is
reluctant to write off the entire campaign by
ditching Moss now. - Sources in the advertising world say that Rimmel
brokered last weeks deal in which Moss issued
her apology and in return received the companys
support. She may seek treatment at a
rehabilitation centre such as The Priory, the
clinic in southwest London which is popular with
celebrities. - In the video, ... Moss is her old self. She is
shown drinking and partying all night and then
dabbing on a new foundation called Recovery
on her face in a taxi before arriving at work
looking beautiful and fresh despite her lack of
sleep. M. Chittenden. Moss bounces back with new
ad deal, Sunday Times Sept. 25.
11The imagery of use positive
- Cocaine as a signal of affluence, luxury
- Functional for a fashion model
- How else to stay as thin as a prepubescent
boy?... Many models subsist on a diet that
includes generous quantities of cigarettes,
caffeine, and cocaine.... Moss has, in the past,
admitted to trying drugs becausen she was worried
about getting fat. (A. Fortini, Slate 23 Sept.) - Managing hard drug use as a symbol of
self-control - writers marveled at how amazing Moss looked,
dressed in hot pants and Nancy Sinatra boots,
even while allegedly getting high in the wee
hours of the morning - The negative as positive
- This being fashion, drugs go in and out of
vogue. In the early 1990s it was heroin that was
chic with Moss, ironically, being the teenage
poster girl for this era. Magazine shoots and
designer advertisements played with heroin
imagery, featuring girls slumped on grubby
sheets, pale and vacant. Sometime around 1995,
cocaine replaced heroin shoots and
advertisements now aimed to evoke the
super-confident, sexually aggressive atmosphere
of a coke-fuelled nightclub. Glass coffee tables
became a favoured stylistss prop, and mirrored
catwalks were de rigueur. - Rumours of Kate Mosss lifestyle have abounded
for years. But it has not been a case of
designers and marketing directors wanting Moss
despite those rumours they adored her, in part,
because of them. (J. Cartner-Morley, Beauty and
the bust, Guardian 23 Sept.)
12The imagery of use negative
- Too positive
- The euphoria bleeds out everything else, so all
you can think about is cocaine. It is such a
powerful feeling. (Prof. J. Henry, Observer, 18
Sept.) - Getting caught
- The fuss about Kate Moss using cocaine reminds
me of the police chief in Casablanca.... Nobody
can possibly be surprised as so often, Ms.
Mosss crime was getting caught. (S. Hoggart,
Guardian 24 Sept.) - There is a world of difference between hinting
an naughtiness calling it decadence,
bohemianism, partying and having drug-use laid
bare, Now the line between that fantasy and
reality has been laid bare, fashion has become
retrospectively moralistic, however implausibly.
(J. Cartner-Morley, Guardian 23 Sept.) - Adverse physical and psychological effects
- I have been around a few hardened
drug-takers.... What you learn is that, sooner
or later, no one can take it. Your world comes
apart. Your health goes. The mind rots. The money
runs out. And the police come calling. - It is different for the very rich. Money like
youth, like good health will protect you from
the ravages of illegal substances for a while.
But only for a while. - Those pictures of Kates bony legs ... reveal
that she has had her run. (Mirror, 19 Sept.) - And then there is addiction ...
13Wild behaviour, abuse or addiction? 1
- So far from Moss (24 Sept.) behaviour which has
reflected badly, various personal issues that I
need to address and ... resolve - Wild behaviour
- A former model who witnessed the wild bender
said she was amazed at the amount of drugs Kate
got through.... She couldnt stop talking and
was also chain-smoking. She was acting quite
big-headed, and boasting about how much drugs she
could do. Then she started dancing on her own in
the room. She was gurning and her eyes were
rolling. (M. Fricker, Mirror 24 Sept.) - Abuse (and illegality, and bad company)
- The trouble is that to Pete Dohertys circle a
line of coke is just like smoking a cigarette.
Shes in trouble being around Pete. It could
wreck her career. (James Mullord, Dohertys
ex-manager, inMirror 19 Sept.) - A friend She wouldnt listen to warnings
about her lifestyle.... The father of Lila,
Mosss 2-year-old That stupid bastard. Shes
not thinking of Lila. I know Kate is a good
mother who loves our child. But Im no longer
allowing our daughter to be in the same room as
Doherty. Hes turned Kate into a druggie like
him. (S. Moyes, Mirror 17 Sept.)
14Wild behaviour, abuse or addiction? 2
- Addiction
- For years, Moss has managed to dodge any real
trouble. But there have long been chinks in her
image. In 1998, she checked herself into a rehab
clinic for exhaustion. In a rare interview,
she admitted that she modeled drunk throughout
much of the 90s. She is almost always
photographed with a cigarette in one hand she
is said to have an 80-a-day habit and a
cocktail in the other. (A. Fortini, Kate Moss,
Slate 23 Sept.) - Beating her addiction will be tough and she
faces extensive therapy and emotional nourishment
to build herself up again.... But letting things
spiral out of control would be harder on Kate....
At the core of addiction is need, a deep-seated
craving, a ravenous, aching need that has no end
and feels as if it cant be quenched or
satiated. (C. Sweet, Confession that could turn
Kates liffe around, Mirror 23 Sept.) - Taking a dive the pluses and minuses of
pleading addiction - A source says that her brother Nick said she
knows shes got to go into rehab. She doesnt
want to but who would? The last time she went in
she told Nick it wasnt a nice place..... Nick
has told his sister she must enter rehab even
if it is only for a few days. (G. Box S.
Moyers, I dont need rehab but it will look bad
if I dont go, Mirror, 19 Sept.) - Under a recent British court judgement that a
celebrity deserved privacy about attending
Narcotiucs Anonymous, if Moss were to argue that
she has a condition that requires treatment
and as such it is personal and medical,... media
intrusion into her privacy could attract privacy
protection by the British courts. (E. Forbes,
Sex, drugs and privacy, Guardian 20 Sept.)
15The idea of addiction
- the discovery of addiction -- (Levine 1978)
- alcohol in post-revolutionary U.S. -- 1800-1830
- Ideology of self-control
- Mobility ? nuclear family on its own
- objectively dependent on husband/fathers
self-control - Early temperance movement method the Pledge
- addiction as explanation for backsliding
- a disease of the will (Valverde, 1998) desire
defeating the will - implies a conceptual separation of desire from
the will - a new, darker view of habitual heavy drinking
in post-1830 British novels (McCormick, 1969) - not a totally novel idea (Warner, Porter), but ?
part of popular thinking along with temperance
(Ferentzy, 2001)
16A profusion of terms addiction, inebriety,
alcoholism, dependence
- Addiction concept established in early 1800s
- Medical discussion by mid-1800s
- Forerunning discussions by Rush, Trotter around
1800 - Medical and popular terminology in English
varies inebriety, dipsomania, narcomania - Alcoholism coined by Huss in 1849
- But only applied in modern sense after 1930s, in
the context of the U.S. alcoholism movement
17Addiction concept applied to other psychoactive
substances
- By 1900, the addiction concept has spread to
other substances, e.g. - Crothers, 1902, The Drug Habits and Their
Treatment - Uses addiction to describe inebriety from
cocaine, chloral, ether, chloroform, etc. - The delusion that these unfortunates have full
possession of their will to abstain or continue
is fast passing away. We are now able to
recognize in most of these cases well-defined
diseases that begin and follow a progressive line
on to death or restoration. - Towns, 1915, Habits that Handicap
- TOBACCO ADDICTION MORE DANGEROUSTHAN DRUG HABIT
OR ALCOHOLISM ... - A very wide experience in studying the result of
the use of narcotics has convinced me that the
total harm done by tobacco is greater than that
done by alcohol or drugs.
18The heart of addiction loss of control ...
- ... over drinking/drug use
- Loss of control in the moment, from intoxication
- Jellinek 1960 inability to stop once started
- Loss of control over time, pattern of use
- Jellinek 1960 inability to abstain
- Focus on the pattern over time, but
- inferred from events
- loss of control as explanation of continued
behaviour despite apparent harm - Edwards and Gross 1976 loss of control ?
impairment of control - Craving as the explanation of loss or impairment
of control - ... over life because of use (cultural rather
than medical concept) - We admitted that we were powerless over alcohol
and that our lives had become unmanageable.
First step of AA - sobriety in AA means more than not drinking
19Addiction and the WHO Expert Committees
- Expert Committee has the task under the
international narcotic control treaties (1961
1971 and earlier treaties) of classifying
substances as addictive and in terms of degree of
addiction - Met annually (every 2 years lately), usually
dominated by pharmacologists, often with US
training - 1957 last attempt to provide a pharmacological
justification for which substances were under
control - addictive substances, versus
- habituating substances
- alcohol in between
- Addiction-producing drugs need strict control,
national and international for habit-forming
drugs, the warning label and national control
measures should suffice,... but any warning
concerning habituation should not carry the
stigma of addiction. (1957 Expert Committee
Report)
20Addiction vs. Habituation WHO Expert
Committee, 1957
21A genealogy of dependence
- Pre-existing general meanings
- weak, dependent personality
- not self-sufficient welfare dependency
- Specific prior meanings in pharmacology
- withdrawal symptoms (as in cross-dependence)
- tolerance withdrawal, taken together ?
- physical dependence in 1964
- 1964 distinction between addiction and
habituation of 1957 abandoned - dependence as the term substituted for both
addiction and habituation - defined as physical but also psychological
(craving, loss of control, etc.) - 1976 applied also to alcohol as alcohol
dependence syndrome (Edwards Gross) - 1980 dependence replaces addiction alcoholism
in 9th ed. of International Classification of
Diseases
22Four versions of dependence in the Anglo-American
tradition
23 Where does addiction/dependence matter in
practice?
- In treatment
- as justification of abstinence standard
- but not per se as the object or goal of treatment
- e.g., Addiction Severity Index (ASI) no measure
of addiction - as justification of maintenance (e.g., methadone)
- addiction too strong to be changed
- In policy and prevention
- drug policies are not directly aimed at addiction
(MacCoun, forthcoming Is the addiction concept
useful for drug policy?)
24Where does addiction/dependence matter in
practice? (continued)
- In policy
- Rhetoric at the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs
- drugs as scourge
- traffickers as evil
- youth as innocent and vulnerable
- but little about the addict or addiction/dependenc
e - addiction/dependence as the rationale for what is
basically a system of criminalization and
coercion - dependence, sin, crime alternatives or
complements as concepts?
25Addiction/dependence and stigma
- Alcoholism concept originally promoted to reduce
the stigma on the alcoholic/inebriate - Within AA sickness concept as reducing the
intolerable load of guilt for new recruits - Alcoholism movement alcoholic distinguished from
the common drunk (Marty Mann) - But it carries its own stigma
- 7 presidents of tobacco companies swearing to
U.S. Congress in 1994 that they do not believe
cigarettes are addictive (stance abandomed in
1998) - Acknowledges failure of self-management and
self-control - Knowledge ? responsibility the duty to cooperate
in the cure or management of the condition
26 - The general theme underlying American
statements on alcoholism has to do with lack of
self-control on the part of the drinker. This
societal symbolism of the deviation as a sign of
character weakness is one of the most vivid and
isolating distinctions which can be made in a
culture which attributes morality, success, and
respectability to the power of a disciplined
will. (Lemert, Social Pathology, 1951356)
27Now you see it, now you dont
- Addiction as a rationale for policy
- but addiction tends to disappear in the content
and application of the policies - addiction vs. habit
- mysteriousness of etiology
- alienation from the true self
- possession by alien forces
- addiction/dependence as a modern, apparently
scientific, substitute for old ideas of spirit
possession?
28Loss of control and modernity -1
- Rationality as the norm, the irrational needs
explaining - A preference for rationalizing explanations
- Intoxication as the archetype of impaired control
- A divorce between will and desire
- That we can find ourselves doing things we desire
even against our will - Is will something permanent with a continuing
existence in us, or does it change from moment to
moment? - Jon Elster, Ulysses and the Sirens
- Economists and rational addiction the temporal
structure of preferences - The consumer society and the cultivation of
desire - The free market and promotion without limits
- Self-control in consumer choice as the only
acceptable limit
29Loss of control and modernity - 2
- The individuation of social control The cultural
imperative of self-control in the moment and
over time - Norbert Elias, The Civilizing Process
- Demonstrating self-control with respect to drugs
as a modern Pilgrims Progress? - Within culturally determined limits? MacAndrew
Edgerton, Drunken Comportment - Except for the bohemian fringe? back to Kate
Moss - Intoxicating substances as a social sorting
process - Replacing no longer acceptable differentiations
by race, class, inheritance - Acceptable because based on the individuals
behaviour, establishing moral worthiness or
stigma - But opt-outs for the privileged (George W Bush),
moral opprobrium for the poor - A postmodern justification for social inequality?