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Introduction: Crossroads of Psychedelic Studies

Jeffrey Breau, Paul Gillis-smith

Psychedelic Intersections January 17, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.70423/0001.18

Summary

The Psychedelic Intersections: 2024 Conference Anthology highlights the emerging scholarly community focused on psychedelics and religion, stemming from a conference at Harvard Divinity School. It features interdisciplinary essays that explore the connections between psychedelics and various fields such as medicine, law, and anthropology. The anthology encourages innovative collaborations and re-examinations of existing power dynamics and spiritual concepts within psychedelic studies.

Study at a glance

Key finding The anthology serves as a platform for interdisciplinary research at the intersections of psychedelics, religion, and other societal factors.

Abstract

Since the 1960s, Harvard Divinity School has been an influential hub of research on psychedelics and religion. Yet, in many ways, the work of building a rich scholarly community around this area of study is just beginning. The Psychedelic Intersections: 2024 Conference Anthology is one step in that larger project. This volume is drawn from Harvard’s “Psychedelic Intersections: Cross-cultural Manifestations of the Sacred” conference, and the essays here feature original interdisciplinary research from scholars and practitioners working at the crossroads of psychedelics, religion, medicine, race, Indigeneity, law, and the underground, history, anthropology, and beyond. We see these intersections as sites for collaboration and innovation in two ways: psychedelics as intersections where unlikely peoples, entities, and institutions meet, and as intersectional forces where the study of psychedelics highlights, challenges, or qualifies pre-existing conceptions, be they imbalances of power, uses of law, or notions of religion and spirituality. In light of these intersections, the Anthology invites readers to imagine new futures for the field of psychedelic studies with a vision of scholarship that is multidisciplinary, collaborative, optimistic yet self-critical, involved both within and beyond the academy, attuned to complexity and diversity, and both sympathetic and intelligent.

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