TOPIC:
Is addiction a cultural category or a biological reality? What evidence can you provide with your assertion?
1400- 1500 Words
KEY POINTS TO BE FOLLOWED:
1. Must make points clear and concise. By inserting your own opinion, put different authors dialog with each other and implicitly show what you think by evaluating the merits of what they say.
2. This topic involves an area of ambiguity, therefore the ideas of biological reality and social construction may intertwine, but make certain to support it all with evidence!
3. Attached are a list of suggested readings to start the research. But must include at least 3 other additional peer reviewed sources.
4. Must use about 6-10 references.
5. Reference system to be used is APA.
IMPORTANT:
Please only bid if you are either doing at least a 3rd year anthropology student or above, or are into teaching line in Anthropology.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Eiser, R (1997) ‘Addiction as a dynamic process’, Addiction Research, 5(5): 361-366.
Krivanek, J. (2000) Drug Misuse, Psychological Dependence and Addiction (Chapter 6). In Understanding Drug Use: Key Issues. Sydney: WEF Associates.
Levine, H.G. (1978) ‘The Discovery of Addiction: Changing Conceptions of Habitual Drunkenness in America’, Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 15: 493-506. (available online at [login to view URL])
Peele, S. (1999) ‘Why Addiction is Not a Disease’. In The Diseasing of America. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, pp. 1-30.
Peele, S & R.J. Degrandpre (1998) ‘Cocaine and the Concept of Addiction: Environmental Factors in Drug Compulsions’, Addiction Research, 6(3): 235-
264.
Reinarman, C. (2005) ‘Addiction as Accomplishment: the Discursive Construction of Disease’, Addiction Research & Theory, 13(4): 307-320.
Robson, P. (1994) ‘Why use Drugs?’ In Forbidden Drugs: Understanding Drugs and Why People Take Them. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 1-18.
Room, R. (2003) ‘The Cultural Framing of Addiction’, Janus Head, 6(2): 221-234. (available online at [login to view URL])
Valverde, Mariana (1998) ‘Introduction’. In Diseases of the Will: Alcohol and the Dilemmas of Freedom. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.