Addicted. pregnant. poor

Author(s)
    • Knight, Kelly Ray
Bibliographic Information

Addicted. pregnant. poor

Kelly Ray Knight

(Critical global health : evidence, efficacy, ethnography)

Duke University Press, 2015

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [279]-295) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

For the addicted, pregnant, and poor women living in daily-rent hotels in San Francisco's Mission district, life is marked by battles against drug cravings, housing debt, and potential violence. In this stunning ethnography Kelly Ray Knight presents these women in all their complex humanity and asks what kinds of futures are possible for them given their seemingly hopeless situation. During her four years of fieldwork Knight documented women’s struggles as they traveled from the street to the clinic, jail, and family court, and back to the hotels. She approaches addicted pregnancy as an everyday phenomenon in these women's lives and describes how they must navigate the tension between pregnancy's demands to stay clean and the pull of addiction and poverty toward drug use and sex work. By creating the space for addicted women's own narratives and examining addicted pregnancy from medical, policy, and social science perspectives, Knight forces us to confront and reconsider the ways we think about addiction, trauma, health, criminality, and responsibility.  

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments  ix Introduction  1 1. Consumption and Insecurity  33 2. Addicted Pregnancy and Time  68 3. Neurocratic Futures in the Disability Economy  102 4. Street Psychiatrics and New Configurations of Madness  125 5. Stratified Reproduction and the Kin of Last Resort  151 6. Victim-Perpetrators  178 Conclusion  206 Appendix  240 Notes  247 Bibliography  279 Index  297

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