Erowid
 
 
Plants - Drugs Mind - Spirit Freedom - Law Arts - Culture Library  
Get the Erowid "Words" T-shirt
Contribute $50 and show support for accurate drug information!
cover image
The Age of Intoxication
Origins of the Global Drug Trade
Rating :
rating
Author(s) :
Benjamin Breen
Pages :
279
Pub Date :
2019
Edition(s) at Erowid :
2019(hb,f/f)
Publisher :
University of Pennsylvania Press
ISBN :
9780812251784
BLURBS #
"Nature gives us opium poppies and Cannabis sativa; culture turns them into overprescribed opioids and overcriminalized dime bags. In his important new book, Benjamin Breen argues that all decisions about intoxicants are judgments about cultural difference, with roots in the early modern imperialism that spun many drugs into global circulation in the first place. The Age of Intoxication is a lively, edifying, wholly convincing book." -- Joyce Chaplin, author of Round About the Earth: Circumnavigation from Magellan to Orbit

"The Age of Intoxication is a fascinating, important, and evocative look at early modern 'drugs'--widely redefined--and their roles in European expansion, medicine, pharmacy, and culture. Benjamin Breen has a striking historical range, tying together histories of the Portuguese and British empires, of the Americas, of Africa, and of South Asia. Combining archival and conceptual depth, the book reveals a connected world of unsung, often subaltern actors. Breen strongly suggests that contemporary distinctions between 'illicit' and 'licit' drug cultures are rooted in this crucial era of global encounters." -- Paul Gootenberg, author of Andean Cocaine: The Making of a Global Drug

"Innovative, smart, accessible, and a pleasure to read, The Age of Intoxication is the first history of drugs as cultural products. In Benjamin Breen's hands, this history contains as many lessons about society as it does about modern science." -- James Sweet, University of Wisconsin, Madison

"The Age of Intoxication is an incisive, vividly recounted analysis of two vast yet interwoven imperial histories, using individual life stories, plant itineraries, medical recipes, and mercantile networks to tell the stories of 'failed' drugs we do not normally include alongside more 'successful' commodities such as chocolate, coffee, and tobacco. In engaging prose and humorous asides, from Portuguese Angola to the wilds of Brazil, Java, and beyond, Benjamin Breen takes us on a colorful historical trip through the mind-altering passageways of the early modern world, leaving no stone (or hallucinogenic mushroom) unturned." -- Neil Safier, The John Carter Brown Library