“…In attempting to offer some possible priorities for a feminism engaged with psychedelics I hope that the provocations I make here, in advocating for an acid feminism interested in psychedelics as experimental, political tools as well as technologies for personal development and transcendence, also go some way to opening up conversations about the role of feminism in the psychedelic community and field. Beyond merely extending the volume of women working in and speaking to the field, important work is already underway to revise the history of psychedelic research and put women’s ‘hidden’ contributions to the front and centre of the field (Dubus, 2020; Dyck & Chacruna Institute, 2018; Kline, 2020), in addition. Further than this, however, more could be done to highlight women’s first-person accounts of using psychedelics experimentally, not least by revising the typical canon of literature associated with the figure of the psychonaut to include texts by women, such as the diaries of Anaïs Nin, below.…”