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El. knyga: Travel and Drugs in Twentieth-Century Literature

(Nipissing University, Canada)
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This book examines the connections between two disparate yet persistently bound thematics -- mobility and intoxication -- and explores their central yet frequently misunderstood role in constructing subjectivity following the 1960s. Emerging from profound mid-twentieth-century changes in how drugs and travel were imagined, the conceptual nexus discussed sheds new light on British and North American responses to sixties counterculture. With readings of Aldous Huxley, William Burroughs, Alex Garland, Hunter S. Thompson, and Robert Sedlack, Banco traces twin arguments, looking at the ways travel is imagined as a disciplinary force acting upon the creative, destabilizing powers of psychedelic intoxication; and exploring the ways drugs help construct travel spaces and practices as, at times, revolutionary, and at other times, neo-colonial. By following a sequence of shifting understandings of drug and travel orthodoxies, this book traverses fraught and irresistibly linked terrains from the late 1950s up to a period marked by international, postmodern tourism. As such, it helps illuminate a world where tourism is continually expanding yet constantly circumscribed, and where illegal drugs are both increasingly unregulated in the global economy and perceived more and more as crucial agents in the construction of human subjectivity.

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(12)
PART I: Set and Setting
``Causing Frameworks to Shift'': Theorizing Tripping
13(19)
Starting Selves: Aldous Huxley and William S. Burroughs
32(25)
PART II: Drugs and the Disciplinary Power of Utopian Travel
The Permeable Self and the Horrors of Consumption: Aldous Huxley's Island
57(19)
What's He Smoking?: Cannabis and Cigarettes in Alex Garland's The Beach
76(25)
PART III: Drugs and the Revisions of Anti-Tourism
``Man, This Is the Way to Travel'': Seeing Vegas Anew in Hunter S. Thompson's Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
101(24)
Eating In Africa: Becoming-Animal in Robert Sedlack's The African Safari Papers
125(32)
Conclusion
154(3)
Notes 157(14)
Bibliography 171(10)
Index 181
Lindsey Banco is Assistant Professor of English at Nipissing University.