Drinking to excess has been a striking problem for industrial and post-industrial societies – who is responsible when a ‘free’ individual opts for a slow suicide? The causes of such drinking have often been blamed on heredity, moral weakness, ‘disease’ (addiction), hedonism, and Romantic illusion. Yet there is another reason which may be more fundamental and which has been overlooked or dismissed, and it is that the drinker may act with sincere philosophical intent. The Existential Drinker looks at the convergence of a new kind of excessive, habitual drinking, beginning in the nineteenth century, and a new way of thinking about the self which in the twentieth century comes to be labelled ‘Existential’. A substantial introduction covers questions of self, will, consciousness, authenticity, and ethics in relation to drinking, while introducing aspects of Existential thought pertinent to the discussion. The Existential-drinker canon is anchored in Jack London’s ‘alcoholic memoir’ John Barleycorn (1913), where London claims he can get at the truth of existence only through the insights afforded by excessive and repeated alcohol use. The book then covers drinker-texts such as Jean Rhys’s interwar novels, Malcolm Lowry’s Under the Volcano, Charles Jackson’s The Lost Weekend and John O’Brien’s Leaving Las Vegas, along with less well-known works such as Frederick Exley’s A Fan’s Notes, Venedikt Yerofeev’s Moscow–Petushki, and A. L. Kennedy’s Paradise. The book will appeal to anybody with an interest in drinking and literature, as well as those with more specialised concerns in drinking studies, Existentialism, twentieth-century literature, and medical humanities.
Army of the Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina
European Union
Croat Democratic Union, Bosnia-Herzegovina branch
Croat Defence Council
Implementation Force
International Police Task Force
International Relations
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria
Non-Aligned Movement
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Independent State of Croatia
Republika Srpska
Party of Democratic Action
Serb Democratic Party
Stabilization Force
League of Communists of Yugoslavia (until 1953 known as the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ))
Third Country National
Tvoje lice zvuci poznato (television programme)
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
United Nations Protection Force
United States of America
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
Army of Yugoslavia
Army of the Bosnian Serb Republic
Women, Peace and Security