Abstract
The medicalization of psychedelic drugs has gained significant momentum over the past two decades in the United States, ushering in new forms of scientific, medical, and clinical practice and training. As an increasing number of research programs and academic institutions focus on the therapeutic potential of psychedelic drugs, it is important to recognize that the emphasis on medical import is a specific cultural reification. Since limited anthropological research exists on the medicalization of psychedelics, it is necessary to reassert that the nature of psychedelics, like all drugs, transforms both within and across cultural contexts. In combining interdisciplinary research, semi-structured interviews, and netnography, this article introduces the concept of psychedelic assemblages to argue that the nature of psychedelics drugs is not only contingent upon the forms of signification and assigned functions relative to each culture’s reification of them, but that each of the ways psychedelics become reified produces unique sociocultural and material forms and effects.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
