Social lubricant
A social lubricant is any food, beverage, drug or activity that stimulates social interactions or helps people feel more comfortable in social occasions. Different cultures use different social lubricants for this purpose. Some common social lubricants are:
- Humor is the most prevalent social lubricant spanning all cultures and age groups.
- Alcoholic beverages (beer in pub culture, or wine in wine bars, for example)
- Marijuana
- MDMA
- Coffee (in coffee cultures, for example)
- Tea (at tea parties, for example)
- Tobacco (in cigarettes or a hookah, for example)
- Small talk (informal discourse or conversation, for example)
- Mobile images (Cf. Hjorth, Larissa and Pink, Sara. 2014. “New Visualities and the Digital Wayfarer: Reconceptualizing Camera Phone Photography and Locative Media”. Mobile Media & Communication, 2 (1): 40–57.)
"Social lubricant" is sometimes used as a euphemism for a bribe or other improper payment.
Referring to alcohol or marijuana as "social lubricants" has been criticized because they have negative effects on empathy. Alcohol is especially known for this and has the potential to increase aggression and cause disputes or violence.
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