Meth alchemists all over the United States tap the occulted potencies of industrial chemical and big pharma products to try to cure the ills of precarious living: underemployment, insecurity, and the feeling of idleness. Meth fires up your attention and makes repetitive tasks pleasurable, whether it’s factory work or tinkering at home. Users are awake for days and feel exuberant and invincible. In one person’s words, they “get more life.”
The Alchemy of Meth is a nonfiction storybook about St. Jude County, Missouri, a place in decomposition, where the toxic inheritance of deindustrialization meets the violent hope of this drug-making cottage industry. Jason Pine bases the book on fieldwork among meth cooks, recovery professionals, pastors, public defenders, narcotics agents, and pharmaceutical executives. Here, St. Jude is not reduced to its meth problem but Pine looks at meth through materials, landscapes, and institutions: the sprawling context that makes methlabs possible. The Alchemy of Meth connects DIY methlabs to big pharma’s superlabs, illicit speed to the legalized speed sold as ADHD medication, uniquely implicating the author’s own story in the narrative.
By the end of the book, the backdrop of St. Jude becomes the foreground. It could be a story about life and work anywhere in the United States, where it seems no one is truly clean and all are complicit in the exploitation of their precious resources in exchange for a livable present—or even the hope of a future.
0 有用 ztshin 2021-11-15 12:41:40
非常喜欢副标题decomposition的妙用,整本书借用此对meth cooking的精准叙事和通过对chemical life的critical reflection,实际上是一个不断解构(de-compose)学术文本体裁(composition)的尝试。
0 有用 Shawrobin 2021-10-25 04:55:38
alternative relationships w chemicals (nice topic but the writing style is inaccessible
0 有用 苇间风 2023-04-19 12:59:50 美国
读了个开头就放弃了跳着看了一点…这东西要不是必读狗都不看