Books: Drunk Albert Cotugno Books: Drunk Albert Cotugno

New scientist: Could alcohol-induced creativity be key to civilisation?

A childlike state of mind in an adult is key to cultural innovation, argues [Slingerland]. Intoxicants provide an efficient route to that state by temporarily taking the prefrontal cortex offline, he says.
— Vijaysree Venkatraman

Vijaysree Venkatraman, “Drunk review: Could alcohol-induced creativity be key to civilisation?,” New Scientist, June 2, 2021

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Books: Drunk Albert Cotugno Books: Drunk Albert Cotugno

Washington Post: Sip this book responsibly, and at your own risk.

While Slingerland argues for the benefits of intoxication — you might not want to give this book to someone in recovery — along the way he also writes about agriculture, creativity, geography and aesthetics. “Drunk” celebrates tipsiness rather than sordid excess.

Bethanne Patrick, “10 books to read in June,” Washington Post, June 1, 2021

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Books: Drunk Albert Cotugno Books: Drunk Albert Cotugno

Smithsonian: immensely readable exploration of drunkenness

Blending history, anthropology, neuroscience, genetics, archaeology and a range of other disciplines, Drunk outlines the manifold merits of intoxication, from fostering creativity to relieving stress to building social bonds.
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Books: Drunk Edward Slingerland Books: Drunk Edward Slingerland

Wall Street Journal: a thoughtful and spirited defense of intoxication

You might suspect that Mr. Slingerland, an expert in Chinese philosophy with eclectic academic interests, is seeing his subject through beer goggles. But his approach is stone-cold sober, “defending the power of Dionysus . . . in a way that bows to Apollo,” as he puts it.
— Julian Baggini

Julian Baggini, “‘Drunk’ Review: Two Cheers for Happy Hour,” Wall Street Journal, May 20, 2021.

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Books: Drunk Laura Trippi Books: Drunk Laura Trippi

Kirkus: A spirited look at drinking

A professor of Asian studies at the University of British Columbia, Slingerland draws on archaeology, anthropology, history, neuroscience, psychopharmacology, social psychology, literature, poetry, and genetics to argue...for the social, cultural, and psychological benefits of getting drunk.
— Kirkus Reviews
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