David T. Courtwright is John A. Delaney Presidential Professor at the University of North Florida.
From Library Journal
Historian Courtwright (Violent Land) ranges widely across more than four centuries and the world to chart the "psychoactive revolution" that made ever more potent drugs available to all classes of people and redefined the meaning and means of consciousness, and even social conscience. As pleasure came to matter more, drugs of all kinds found ready takers. Courtwright gathers up historical, scientific, literary, artistic, and public policy references on psychoactive substances, legal and illegal, to show how drug usage was as much an outgrowth of market forces as cultural habits. Drugs were commerce and currency and moved from geographically limited areas of cultivation to worldwide consumption, with ever more efficient means of production and supply driving down prices and thereby opening markets to the poorest. Efforts by governments over the past century to outlaw particular drugs, while regulating others, have proved uneven and erratic. Always intelligent and informed, witty and wise, Courtwright's book is the best way to get a fix on why getting drugs out of our systems would require more than abstinence; it would take another revolution in handling social and personal pain. An essential acquisition.DRandall M. Miller, Saint Joseph's Univ., Philadelphia
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From The New England Journal of Medicine
Set on a world stage, this book is about the ``psychoactive revolution'' of the past 500 years. Courtwright, well known for his work concerning the history of drug addiction and, more generally, social history, observes that in wealthy societies in the 20th century a cornucopia of drugs, illicit and licit, became available and popular. How did this situation arise, he asks, and how have societies and governments coped with it, and especially, why have some drugs posed more of a problem than others? The main story relates to the expansion of European oceangoing commerce in early modern times and the resulting discoveries of new commercial opportunities. In the drug trade, the three big items eventually became alcohol, tobacco, and caffeine, to the exclusion of other possibilities derived from the plant world. These three drugs remain abundant and profitable commodities, eliciting various responses in different societies.
Thus, this book is not about medicine itself or about the changing practices of physicians over the centuries. Although the author mentions those practices from time to time, he is concerned with the broader story of the sweeping changes in the markets, and thereby in the uses, of a range of substances. And he explains how governments have responded differently in different ages to the growing commodification and popularity of psychoactive substances. Alcohol and caffeine were, of course, Old World products whose spread became enormously wider as a result of European expansion and European technology. Tobacco was a New World plant that conquered the Old World after Europeans discovered its psychoactive (and addictive) properties. At about the same time, advances in distilling techniques and the spread of information about them through the printed word created opportunities for making and selling alcohol. After their conquest of South America, some Europeans began cultivating coffee on that continent, while elsewhere other Europeans were expanding the tea trade. Alcohol, tobacco, and caffeine soon became important trade commodities, the taxation of which was a mainstay of government finances.
Courtwright does not confine his story to the big three in the drug world. He also writes about cannabis, opium, coca and cocaine, and synthetic products. None of these substances or their derivatives became commodified in quite the same way as did the big three, although there were important regional exceptions, such as the infamous opium dens of the Chinese. Part of the story of the lesser-used drugs is the relative absence of their commercialization. For example, until well into the 20th century, smoking marijuana was a practice of particular -- and relatively small -- populations in certain regions. Nor is Courtwright's analysis entirely commercial. To the Christian Europeans, the Amerindians' use of plant hallucinogens such as peyote was reprehensible.
One essential difference with respect to alcohol, tobacco, and caffeine was the skill of entrepreneurs and their resulting profits and power in promoting these products. Courtwright's approach is to paint a large picture, while occasionally delving in some depth into particulars. He writes about James Duke and the growth of the cigarette trade after the late 19th century. The industry that Duke's ingenuity and acumen fostered became very powerful, and it remains so today, able to fight off efforts to restrict it severely or even to eradicate it, however steep is the mountain of evidence about the ill effects of tobacco use.
Herein lies the story of a sea change in social approaches to drug use and the drug trades. With the advance of industrialized societies, concern mounted about the effects of psychoactive substances. Altered states of consciousness do not mix well with the needs of a technologically complex civilization. Europeans sometimes tolerated altered states of consciousness among peasants and workers as a means of easing the pain of their often miserable lives, especially in early modern times. Views changed with advancing industrialization in the 19th century, however. Even so, efforts to control the use of tobacco and alcohol detract from their potential as objects of taxation (and contradict the realities of their use). The enormous power of the tobacco and alcohol industries has overcome efforts to ban or restrict their products. When the United States, for instance, prohibited the liquor trades in 1920, wealthy Americans eventually engineered the law's repeal by arguing that it would promote an economic revival (repeal occurred in 1933, the nadir of the Great Depression) and pointing out the benefits of having alcohol taxes.
In the case of other drugs that were declared illicit during the industrial age in some places, there are ongoing efforts to eradicate their use. Courtwright is known for his use of historical knowledge to argue against the legalization of ``drugs,'' and he does so again in a concluding chapter dealing with dangerous psychoactive substances in the 21st century.
Courtwright writes with felicity, gracefully constructing his narrative in a clearly organized fashion, eschewing jargon and technical language. This is an engaging book that deserves a wide audience among general readers.
發表於2024-11-02
Forces of Habit 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
噓,嚴肅點,這是本很學術的書。 當初看到這本書時,吸引我的是正題下麵的一句話“煙、酒、咖啡和鴉片的曆史”,我原本以為這隻是一本普通的工具書,像常規的那樣,介紹各類酒的産地、品種、特色、品牌以及背後故事等,但是不同的是這次多瞭煙、咖啡和鴉片,而且它不是單純的工...
評分每天早上,到瞭辦公室,我會很自然地喝一杯咖啡。而在傢呢!就沏上一杯龍井。 一些男同事(也包括部分女同事)每天會有幾次時間站在辦公室的大門外抽煙,輕鬆地說笑著,在煙霧中放鬆一會兒。 傢裏裝修時,我去工地現場,發現裝修工人盡管吃著簡單的蘿蔔、白菜、饅頭或米飯,...
評分Ⅰ The Confluence of Psychoactive Resources 20 | 吸煙者代謝咖啡的速度比不吸煙者快50%,所以要頻繁續杯纔能維持同樣的提神效果。許多藥物不但可以彼此取代,還可以提高其他藥物的需求量,所以藥物貿易並不是一種“零和競爭”。 40 | 由於伊斯蘭教禁酒,鴉片乃是比較好的...
評分說在前麵的話: 這本書讀瞭有整整兩周,一直不敢下筆。想來也是有原因的:其一,筆者不屬於任何“癮品”(廣義上的上癮物質,後文會有詳解)的服用者;其二,筆者沒有史學功底(我專於英語與法學),於此下筆就怕耽誤各位。但筆者找到瞭齣口一一破解之:奧運會遊泳冠軍的教練可...
評分說在前麵的話: 這本書讀瞭有整整兩周,一直不敢下筆。想來也是有原因的:其一,筆者不屬於任何“癮品”(廣義上的上癮物質,後文會有詳解)的服用者;其二,筆者沒有史學功底(我專於英語與法學),於此下筆就怕耽誤各位。但筆者找到瞭齣口一一破解之:奧運會遊泳冠軍的教練可...
圖書標籤: 藥 社會 電子版 Harvard_University_Press 2001
Forces of Habit 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載