Chapter 1 - “Morals are not exactly a priority”
Chapter 2 - The disciplinary spectrum
Chapter 3 - Tragedy-trauma disciplinary apparatus
Chapter 4 - The musicality of chemsex
Chapter 5 - Fear to pleasure
Chapter 6 - Capitalism and destruction
Chapter 7 - The moral lessons of chemsex
Biography
Dr Maurice Nagington is a lecturer in Health Sciences at The University of Manchester, UK. His research interests include the intersections of health and cultural analysis, with interests in chemsex, ethics, HIV, sexual health, COVID-19, and palliative care.
Nagington has produced a text that thus far has been sorely lacking in the chemsex literature; one that fundamentally rejects the pathologising and moralising sentiment that has dominated writing on this topic to date. His book uses chemsex as a case study to address a key philosophical question, ‘how can we have more liveable and viable lives?’ In doing so, he allows space to interrogate dominant narratives of trauma, risk, and destruction. A thoughtful, enticing, and theory-based exploration of the musicality of chemsex further adds to the novelty of this book and encourages the reader to truly expand their thinking beyond the common tropes that befall this topic – and instead understand chemsex in terms of pleasure rather than fear.
Professor Adam Bourne, Director of Australian Research Centre in Sex, Health and Society, La Trobe University
Nagington’s compelling discussion of chemsex takes us on a critical journey through the debates that have attended its emergence, its representation in a variety of cultural forms, from documentary to pornography, as well as fascinating accounts that participants themselves provide of their experiences. Ultimately, he recognises a positive potential in the physical relations chemsex facilitates, without denying the dangers and dissatisfactions that some would like us to believe exhaust its significance. Not the least of the book’s achievements, though, is its focus on the Manchester, rather than London, scene and the quite distinctive spatial and social relations that characterise it. Chemsex emerges from this essential account by turns demystified, humanised, localised, and theorised.
David Alderson, Professor of Literary and Cultural Studies, University of Manchester
Grounded in generous conversations with chemsex practitioners, The Moral Lessons of Chemsex develops a truly original, creatively theorised perspective on chemsex. For Nagington, chemsex raises the possibility of an ethics that emphasises our permeability and vulnerability to each other. The conception of “visceral solidarity” he develops on this basis is compelling and vital.
Professor Kane Race, University of Sydney






