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- Title
Dangerous sports and recreational drug-use: rationalizing and contextualizing risk.
- Authors
Larkin, Michael; Griffiths, Mark D.
- Abstract
This article reports upon the Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) of a small number of semi-structured interviews, conducted with persons engaging in either recreational drug-use (primarily identified here as Ecstasy-users) or dangerous sports (primarily identified here as bungee-jumpers). Our analysis focuses upon the manner in which these participants make sense of their initiation and maintenance experiences, and the means by which they understand and make sense of risk. In particular, we draw attention to the distinctions between our participants' rational and contextual reconstructions of risky decisions. These distinctions indicate that our participants are able to draw upon a complex cultural and relational understanding of risk and pleasure, and are thus able to deal quite effectively with the contradictory experience of taking ‘non-volitional’ action. This exploration of persons' strategies for displacing agency in relation to potentially negative outcomes may have implications for research and practice in related areas. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- Subjects
DRUG abuse; ECSTASY (Drug); EXTREME sports; BUNGEE jumping; RISK-taking behavior; PHENOMENOLOGICAL sociology; PHENOMENOLOGICAL psychology
- Publication
Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 2004, Vol 14, Issue 4, p215
- ISSN
1052-9284
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/casp.770