History

Women and Psychedelics: History’s Untold Stories

June 28, 2024
Featuring: Erika Dyck

In this episode of Vital Psychedelic Conversations, Johanna interviews Erika Dyck: author, professor, historian, Vital instructor, and research chair in the History of Health & Social Justice at the University of Saskatchewan.

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In this episode of Vital Psychedelic Conversations, Johanna interviews Erika Dyck: author, professor, historian, Vital instructor, and research chair in the History of Health & Social Justice at the University of Saskatchewan.

Dyck talks about the book she co-edited: Women and Psychedelics: Uncovering Invisible Voices, which was released in March as a Chacruna anthology, and collects pieces from several different authors highlighting the untold or lesser known stories from women throughout psychedelic history. Albert Hofmann was the first person to intentionally ingest LSD, but who was the first woman to do so? Who were the women assisting in research or sitting with experiencers in the early days who never got the credit for their contributions? Who were the women supporting some of the biggest psychedelic names in history?

She talks about:

  • The contrast in societal attitudes towards psychedelic exploration based on traditional gender roles
  • Some of her favorite stories from the book, including a woman diagnosed with manic depression becoming one of the first guides in LSD trials
  • The use of psychedelics in pregnancy and birthing practices across other cultures
  • Traditional gender attributes: Are women more wired to care for others? Is there something about the psychedelic experience that’s inherently feminine?
  • The importance of moving past the gender binary and implementing more diversity in research – with the challenge of needing to universalize medicine at the same time

and more!

Links

Chacruna.net: Women

Women and Psychedelics: Uncovering Invisible Voices (Chacruna Anthologies), Edited by Erika Dyck, Beatriz C. Labate, and more

PT457 – Rites of Passage, Psychedelic History, and Rediscovering Our Hearts, featuring: Erika Dyck & Jono Remington-Hobbs

PT217 – Erika Dyck – Canadian Psychedelic History

Chacruna.net: Susi’s Tram Ride: Recognizing the First Woman to Take LSD

Globalearthrepairfoundation.org: Dr. Nancy Turner

PT498 – Traversing the Psychedelic Landscape: From Esalen and Millbrook to the Future of Shulgin Farm, featuring: Maria Mangini, Ph.D., FNP

Womensvisionarycongress.org

Chacruna.net: How Music Therapists Helped Build Psychedelic Therapy

Concordia.ca: Nora E. Jaffary, PhD

PT499 – Mesoamerican Psychedelics, Decolonization, and the Concept of an Ontological Turn, featuring: Osiris González Romero

Chacruna.net: Dream and Ecstasy in Mesoamerican Worldview: An Interview with Mercedes de la Garza

Orthomolecular.org: Abram Hoffer’s 60 Years of Research and Discovery of the Orthomolecular Approach to Psychiatry

*Amazon links are affiliate links, meaning that Psychedelics Today will receive a percentage of the sale

Erika Dyck

In this Episode

Erika Dyck

Erika Dyck is a professor and a Canada research chair in the history of health & social justice at the University of Saskatchewan. She is the author or co-author of several books, including Psychedelic Psychiatry (2008); Facing Eugenics (2013); Managing Madness (2017); Challenging Choices (2020); and Psychedelics: A Visual Odyssey (2024). Erika is the co-editor of two McGill-Queen’s University Press book series on the history of medicine and Intoxicating Histories. She is currently the president of the Alcohol and Drugs History Society.

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