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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:The Social Life of Psychedelics | Psychedelics & Rave Utopias
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SUMMARY:The Social Life of Psychedelics | Psychedelics & Rave Utopias
DESCRIPTION:<h3><a href="https://mahindrahumanities.harvard.edu/psychedelics-society-and-culture">Psychedelics in Society &amp; Culture</a> | Initiative-Supported Event</h3><h4>Speakers: Emily Witt (<em>The New Yorker</em>) &amp; Michelle Lhooq (<em>Rave New World</em>)</h4><h4>About the Event</h4><p><span>The rave, like every era of psychedelic counterculture, has long presented a hopeful vision of technofuturism. In 2026, the drugs are weird, the phones are out, the politics are oppressive, and machine-made music is becoming self-generating. Can the rave still offer us a periscope out of the slop era - or has the portal permanently closed? Journalists Emily Witt and Michelle Lhooq look at the past, present, and collapsing future of rave utopianism.</span></p><h4>About the Speakers</h4><p id="gmail-avWBGd-150">Michelle Lhooq is an independent journalist and chronicler of the radical underground. She writes gonzo dispatches from the global frontiers of psychedelics and rave scenes in her newsletter,&nbsp;<a href="https://ravenewworld.substack.com/">Rave New World</a>—tracking how counterculture is evolving in an era of major paradigm shifts, rising authoritarianism, and algorithmic hegemony. Previously, she was a features&nbsp;editor at VICE covering electronic music, and a contributing editor reporting on psychedelic news and culture at DoubleBlind magazine. Lhooq's work is interested in liminality, communal modes of resistance, new drug trends, and the politics of pleasure; previous stories include a&nbsp;<a href="https://ravenewworld.substack.com/p/a-post-colonial-history-of-psychedelic">post-colonial history of Goa trance</a>, the science of&nbsp;<a href="https://www.growbyginkgo.com/2022/10/25/custom-highs/">GMO weed</a>,&nbsp;<a href="https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2023/aug/28/burning-man-protest-climate-change-environment">climate protestors at Burning Man</a>, and a&nbsp;<a href="https://cswr.hds.harvard.edu/publications/psychedelic-intersections/post-cringe-psychedelics-lhooq">post-cringe theory</a>&nbsp;of psychedelic spirituality. She is the author of&nbsp;<a href="https://prestelpublishing.penguinrandomhouse.de/book/Weed/Michelle-Lhooq/Prestel/e545512.rhd"><em>Weed: Everything You Want to Know But Are Always Too Stoned to Ask</em></a>, and her writing has also appeared in <em>New York Magazine</em>, <em>The Guardian</em>, <em>Bloomberg</em>, <em>The Los Angeles Times</em>, and <em>GQ</em>.</p><p>Emily Witt has been a staff writer at <em>The New Yorker</em> since 2018. She has covered breaking news and politics from around the country, and has written about culture, sexuality, drugs, and night life. She is the author of the books <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0865478791/?ots=1&amp;tag=thneyo0f-20"><em>Future Sex</em></a>, <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/0997126485/?ots=1&amp;tag=thneyo0f-20"><em>Nollywood: The Making of a Film Empire</em></a>, and <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Health-Safety-Breakdown-Emily-Witt/dp/0593317645/"><em>Health and Safety</em></a>, which received the Los Angeles <em>Times</em>’ 2025 Christopher Isherwood Prize for Autobiographical Prose. She has reported from many countries and was a Fulbright scholar in Mozambique.</p><h4><em>This event is part of the Social Life of Psychedelics talk series.</em></h4><p><span>What do psychedelics reveal about the people and culture who work with them?&nbsp;</span></p><p><span>Psychedelics shape society, politics, religions, law, music, or medicine. They gain their power not just from their psychopharmacology, but from the many ways that people use them: to influence others, form relationships and identities, negotiate hierarchies, imagine futures, and create transformative social worlds. This talk series will use psychedelics as a probe to consider the assumptions, desires, and imaginations of cultural ecosystems.</span></p><p><span><strong>Social Life of Psychedelics talks will take place every 2nd and 4th Wednesday of the spring 2026 semester in the Thompson Room (Barker Center 110). Contact </strong></span><a href="mailto:hharte@g.harvard.edu"><span><strong>Amadeus Harte</strong></span></a><span><strong> with any questions.</strong></span></p>
LOCATION:Thompson Room (Barker Center 110)
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20260408T220000Z
DTEND:20260409T000000Z
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