home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!news.bbn.com!news.bbn.com!rshapiro
- From: rshapiro@bbn.com (Richard Shapiro)
- Newsgroups: rec.music.bluenote
- Subject: Re: On Drugs, Bebop and The Wire
- Date: 30 Dec 92 13:49:41
- Organization: BBN, Cambridge MA
- Lines: 30
- Message-ID: <RSHAPIRO.92Dec30134941@kariba.bbn.com>
- References: <1992Dec29.034842.28962@cbnewsl.cb.att.com>
- <RSHAPIRO.92Dec29154328@kariba.bbn.com>
- <1992Dec29.211926.11248@pony.Ingres.COM>
- <SMEHTA.92Dec30115921@kwela.nynexst.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: kariba.bbn.com
- In-reply-to: smehta@kwela.nynexst.com's message of 30 Dec 92 11:59:21
-
- In article <SMEHTA.92Dec30115921@kwela.nynexst.com> smehta@kwela.nynexst.com (Sandeep Mehta) writes:
- No matter how unrealistic and silly the pseudo-puritanical American
- attitude towards narcotics in the 80-90's may seem, I believe the
- myth that narcotics (not including marijuana etc.) helped cats "hear
- and think clearly" needs to be debunked!
-
-
- Insofar as that myth still holds sway, I think it's not only possible,
- but essential, to debunk it without falling into what you call "the
- pseudo-puritanical American attitude". The series of articles in The
- Wire made a good attempt at doing this. We need more rational thinking
- about drugs and subcultures, not more reliance on cliches (of either
- sort).
-
-
- It is entirely another propostion to
- propagate the myth that drugs made them hipper cats.
-
- Some of the earlier responses to the articles in The Wire seem to be
- premissed on the assumption that drug use is intrinsically "evil" (or
- whatever -- any morally negative term will work as well). If you start
- with that assumption, you already contribute to the propagation of
- this second myth. Living outside the bounds of conventional morality
- is a crucial part of what it means to be "hip". This moralistic
- association of drug use with social deviance, which has now become
- very nearly the only acceptable discourse in the mainstream domestic
- press, can't help but increase the appeal of drugs in communities
- whose very identity is defined by their distance from the mainstream.
- That's why any non-moralistic, non-judgemental article on drugs,
- especially an article that appears in a jazz journal, is ok by me.
-