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Scripting Addiction

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Gaming the language of addiction treatmentScripting Addiction takes readers into the highly ritualized world of mainstream American addiction treatment. It is a world where clinical practitioners e...
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  • 07 November 2010
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Gaming the language of addiction treatment

Scripting Addiction takes readers into the highly ritualized world of mainstream American addiction treatment. It is a world where clinical practitioners evaluate how drug users speak about themselves and their problems, and where the ideal of "healthy" talk is explicitly promoted, carefully monitored, and identified as the primary sign of therapeutic progress. The book explores the puzzling question: why do addiction counselors dedicate themselves to reconciling drug users' relationship to language in order to reconfigure their relationship to drugs?

To answer this question, anthropologist Summerson Carr traces the charged interactions between counselors, clients, and case managers at "Fresh Beginnings," an addiction treatment program for homeless women in the midwestern United States. She shows that shelter, food, and even the custody of children hang in the balance of everyday therapeutic exchanges, such as clinical assessments, individual therapy sessions, and self-help meetings. Acutely aware of the high stakes of self-representation, experienced clients analyze and learn to effectively perform prescribed ways of speaking, a mimetic practice they call "flipping the script."

As a clinical ethnography, Scripting Addiction examines how decades of clinical theorizing about addiction, language, self-knowledge, and sobriety is manifested in interactions between counselors and clients. As an ethnography of the contemporary United States, the book demonstrates the complex cultural roots of the powerful clinical ideas that shape therapeutic transactions—
and by extension administrative routines and institutional dynamics—at sites such as "Fresh Beginnings."

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Price: $47.00
Pages: 336
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Imprint: Princeton University Press
Publication Date: 07 November 2010
ISBN: 9780691144504
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, Social and cultural anthropology, PSYCHOLOGY / Psychopathology / Addiction, Addiction and therapy

"Winner of the 2012 Edward Sapir Book Prize, Society for Linguistic Anthropology"
E. Summerson Carr is assistant professor at the School of Social Service Administration and an affiliated faculty member in the Department of Anthropology and at the Center for Gender Studies at the University of Chicago.