Title: Narcotic Culture. A Social History of Drug Consumption in China
Abstract: Opium and China are synonymous, yet historians have so farfailed to answer one key question: why was opium rather than cannabis or coffee so eagerly consumed ? This article is a preliminary exploration of the cultural significance and social uses of narcotics from the sixteenth to the mid twentieth centuries. On the basis of fresh evidence drawn from archival material and other primary sources, it highlights the sodal dynamics behind the huge expansion of narcotics, from opium smoking as a prestigious elite activity in the seventeenth century to the mass use of morphine in the twentieth centuryThe authors aim to account for the rapidly changing patterns of opium consumption and establish their cultural and sodal determinants, and to explore the 'pre-history ' of opium well before the advent of the 'Opium War'in order to explain howfordgn merchants responded to indigenously generated demands. We also explode the myth of 'opium smoking' as the main consumption pattern by charting various narcotics used in twentieth-century China, from heroin pills to morphine injections.
Publication Year: 2002
Publication Date: 2002-03-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 42
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