Thought-provoking article
«Abstract: This paper explores the ascendancy of electronic cigarettes as part of a wider set of processes
involving the “civilising” of tobacco use. I centrally argue that the growing popularity of e-cigarettes can
only properly be understood when placed in the context of a broader set of historical developments that
have centrally involved the “sanitisation” of smoking. In relation to this undertaking, I explore the curious
convergence between devices which are intended to stop smoking (nicotine replacement therapies) and
technologies designed to keep smoking (electronic nicotine delivery systems). I argue that regulatory and
classificatory distinctions between nicotine “therapies” and “drugs” have increasingly come to collapse,
highlighting the importance of exploring the social and psychological uses of tobacco in understanding,
and informing, policy debates about tobacco regulation. The paper centrally draws upon the work of Norbert Elias and his concept of “civilising processes”. Where many analyses of changing patterns of drug use, consumption and regulation adopt the lens of medicalisation, this paper explores the utility of Elias’s key concepts in explaining long-term transitions and developments in the practice.»
http://www.cambio.unifi.it/upload/sub/Numero 7/17_J_Hughes.pdf
«Abstract: This paper explores the ascendancy of electronic cigarettes as part of a wider set of processes
involving the “civilising” of tobacco use. I centrally argue that the growing popularity of e-cigarettes can
only properly be understood when placed in the context of a broader set of historical developments that
have centrally involved the “sanitisation” of smoking. In relation to this undertaking, I explore the curious
convergence between devices which are intended to stop smoking (nicotine replacement therapies) and
technologies designed to keep smoking (electronic nicotine delivery systems). I argue that regulatory and
classificatory distinctions between nicotine “therapies” and “drugs” have increasingly come to collapse,
highlighting the importance of exploring the social and psychological uses of tobacco in understanding,
and informing, policy debates about tobacco regulation. The paper centrally draws upon the work of Norbert Elias and his concept of “civilising processes”. Where many analyses of changing patterns of drug use, consumption and regulation adopt the lens of medicalisation, this paper explores the utility of Elias’s key concepts in explaining long-term transitions and developments in the practice.»
http://www.cambio.unifi.it/upload/sub/Numero 7/17_J_Hughes.pdf