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The Production of Entheogenic Communities in the United States

Brad Stoddard

July 31, 2024 DOI: 10.1017/9781009429412

Summary

The analysis focuses on the historical and critical aspects of entheogenic religions, which use psychoactive drugs. It highlights how these communities have emerged in the United States, shaped by various historical factors and legal considerations. The work emphasizes that entheogenic communities are culturally and socially constructed, providing insights into the sociocultural, historical, and economic contexts that contribute to the growing link between psychoactive substances and religion.

Study at a glance

Key finding Entheogenic communities are culturally conditioned and historically contingent, influenced by various sociocultural and legal factors.

Abstract

The rise of entheogenic religion – that is, religions that involve the use of psychoactive drugs – has captured the attention of scholars and journalists. These studies tend to advance the interests of practitioners who advocate for the legitimacy of entheogens and of entheogenic religion more broadly. This Element breaks with these approaches as it offers a historical and critical analysis of entheogenic communities. It examines the production of entheogenic groups in the United States and considers the historical factors that have contributed to the rise in psychedelics more broadly. It also explores legal considerations and the impact of the law as a curator of entheogenic communities. This Element recognizes that these communities – like all imagined communities – are culturally conditioned, socially constructed, and historically contingent. By exploring these contingencies, we learn more about the broader sociocultural, historical, and economic frameworks that underlie the burgeoning association of psychoactive substances and religion.

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