TY - JOUR
T1 - Fractals for an ethnography of time and addiction
T2 - Recursive and self-similar temporalities in heroin and poly-substance use
AU - Roe, Laura
AU - Dobroski, Sonja
AU - Manley, Gabriela
AU - Warner, Holly
AU - Dritschel, Heidi
AU - Baldacchino, Alexander Mario
N1 - Funding Information:
This was funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ES/V011383/1).
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023 Roe, Dobroski, Manley, Warner, Dritschel and Baldacchino.
PY - 2023/2/2
Y1 - 2023/2/2
N2 - Drawing on both mathematical and anthropological understandings of fractality, this paper explores alternative perspectives of time as it relates to heroin addiction and poly-substance use in Scotland. The paper ethnographically illustrates temporalities which confound typical conceptualizations of linearity, and which can be better understood as fractal. Senses of linear time are disrupted for people who use heroin through intensive poly-substance use, an increasing trend in Scotland, as both time and memory become fragmented beyond coherence or re-assemblage. Distortedness and complexity being common descriptors applied to mathematical fractals, time shattered into uncountable and un-interpretable fragments similarly connotes fracture, dissonance, and distortion. A meaningful engagement with fractal theory contains the potential to open up new vocabulary, imagery, and theoretical avenues with which to grasp complex and non-linear time experience. The aims of the paper are, therefore, twofold; to both provide a nuanced ethnographic exploration of substance use time, and to develop a reflexive analytical framework for temporal experience through fractals.
AB - Drawing on both mathematical and anthropological understandings of fractality, this paper explores alternative perspectives of time as it relates to heroin addiction and poly-substance use in Scotland. The paper ethnographically illustrates temporalities which confound typical conceptualizations of linearity, and which can be better understood as fractal. Senses of linear time are disrupted for people who use heroin through intensive poly-substance use, an increasing trend in Scotland, as both time and memory become fragmented beyond coherence or re-assemblage. Distortedness and complexity being common descriptors applied to mathematical fractals, time shattered into uncountable and un-interpretable fragments similarly connotes fracture, dissonance, and distortion. A meaningful engagement with fractal theory contains the potential to open up new vocabulary, imagery, and theoretical avenues with which to grasp complex and non-linear time experience. The aims of the paper are, therefore, twofold; to both provide a nuanced ethnographic exploration of substance use time, and to develop a reflexive analytical framework for temporal experience through fractals.
KW - addiction
KW - fractal
KW - fractal analyses
KW - memory
KW - poly-substance use
KW - substance use
KW - temporality
KW - time
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85148362207&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1116142
DO - 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1116142
M3 - Article
C2 - 36816418
SN - 1664-0640
VL - 14
JO - Frontiers in Psychiatry
JF - Frontiers in Psychiatry
M1 - 1116142
ER -