Craving Mirrors: The Cultural Significance of Addiction Literature in Reflecting Societal Truths
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16750317
Keywords:
Addiction Narratives, Structural Violence, Cultural Critique, Redemption Myth, Epistemic AuthorityAbstract
Addiction literature occupies a distinctive and productive interstice within the literary canon, operating simultaneously as intimate testimony and incisive cultural indictment. This study contends that addiction narratives—from the Romantic opium confessions of De Quincey to the trauma-inflected memoirs of Leslie Jamison and Kiese Laymon—function as prisms, refracting the social, political, and economic discontent that epochs of repression and inequality produce. Resisting a reductive psychiatric framing, the texts reveal the interdependent structure of conditions that generate substance mobilizations: capitalist alienation, gendered violence, racial violability, and the persistent failure of both public health and punitive regimes. Through a corpus that encompasses classics and contemporary interventions, the analysis traces addiction literature’s persistent deconstruction of the moral-addict archetype, its suspicion of redemptive teleologies, and its adamant retrieval of the addict’s voice as a source of legible knowledge. Employing close reading and grounded interdisciplinary criticism, the paper posits addiction literature as a necessary genre: its narrative force is less its final contribution than its analytic capacity to illuminate and to contest the institutional frameworks of suffering and desire.
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