Offering a social and biological account of why psychoactive goods proved so seductive, David Courtwright tracks the intersecting paths by which popular drugs entered the stream of global commerce. He shows how the efforts of merchants and colonial planters expanded world supply, drove down prices, and drew millions of less affluent purchasers into the market, effectively democratizing drug consumption. He also shows how Europeans used alcohol as an inducement for native peoples to trade their furs, sell captives into slavery, and negotiate away their lands, and how monarchs taxed drugs to finance their wars and expanding empires. Forces of habit explains why such profitable exploitation has increasingly given way, over the last hundred years, to policies of restriction and prohibition--and how economic and cultural considerations have shaped those policies to determine which drugs are readily accessible, which strictly medicinal, and which forbidden altogether.
David T. Courtwright Knihy
David Courtwright je známy svojou prácou o histórii užívania drog a protidrogovej politiky v americkom a svetovom kontexte. Jeho skúmanie sa zameriava aj na špecifické problémy hraničných prostredí a ich históriu. Vo svojej najnovšej knihe analyzuje búrlivú politiku a nečakané výsledky kultúrnych vojen, ktoré zachvátili Ameriku v desaťročiach po Nixonovom zvolení. Courtwrightov prístup sa vyznačuje hlbokým historickým vhľadom a schopnosťou prepájať zdanlivo nesúvisiace spoločenské javy.


The Age of Addiction
- 336 stránok
- 12 hodin čítania