The two key actors in most accounts of the antidepressant bioeconomy are the consumers who purchase a pill that 'works' to change their brain neurochemistry and the profiting pharmaceutical companies. This presentation develops an expanded account of antidepressant-related economic activity based on diversified forms of labor. A research project with people who take antidepressants is drawn on to illustrate how the antidepressant pill – as an object – can accelerate particular kinds of labor. This work is defined here as 'collaborative connective labor', the energy expenditure of human and nonhuman entities in forming connections. The presentation demonstrates how the intensified connective activity around the antidepressant object forms an organised and contained assemblage. Antidepressant drug 'effects' and the 'depressed' subject form are shown to emerge from this assemblage. It is argued that the depression and pharmaceutical industries extract capital from these collective formations. The paper then discusses the implications of adding collaborative connective labour to understandings of the antidepressant bioeconomy. It concludes by discussing how the empirical examination of specific drug assemblages is a way of expanding what counts as economic activity in drug bioeconomies.
History
Publication title
Knowledge, Culture, Economy International conference
Department/School
School of Social Sciences
Publisher
Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University
Place of publication
Australia
Event title
Knowledge/Culture/Economy International Conference
Event Venue
Sydney, Australia
Date of Event (Start Date)
2014-11-03
Date of Event (End Date)
2014-11-05
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Public health (excl. specific population health) not elsewhere classified; Expanding knowledge in human society