"Anyone with an interest in social history will find this book
fascinating. . . . A valuable resource and an interesting read."
-- "Drugs and Alcohol Review"
"The sermons, speeches, medical arguments, and policy papers
gathered here adequately convey changing attitudes toward these
sometimes licit, sometimes illicit substances. For classes in
public policy, reform, or public health or for individuals
interested in these areas, this book will be exceedingly
informative and useful."
--"Journal of the History of Medicine"
"It is a powerful, clearly written, and well-researched
reference on the history of drugs in the U.S...Readers will learn
much about the temperance movements and the introduction of cocaine
into the American market, including coca Cola products."
--"Choice"
"This volume is an ambitious attempt to provide, through a
collection of primary sources, an overview of the US experience
with drugs and drug control. . . . "Drugs in America" is a
splendidly edited volume, of interest both to the substance abuse
specialist and the general reader."
--"Jama: Journal of the American Medical Association"
Most Americans would be surprised to learn that large quantities
of beer were brought over on the Puritan ships and that the
hallowed Puritans were fond of drink. How many today realize that
hemp was once one of our most lucrative cash cropsencouraged by
President John Adams and promoted by the Agriculture department? Or
that cocaine, opium and heroin had several waves of popularity in
this century and the last? Drugs and alcohol have been with us from
the start. So have attempts to control or eliminate their use. In
the first anthology of its kind, renowneddrug policy expert David
Musto chronicles the rise and fall and rise again of the most
popular mind altering substances in the Unites States: alcohol,
marijuana, cocaine and opiates.
In the section on alcohol we hear the Reverend Lyman Beecher,
prominent radical abolitionist and father of Harriet Beecher Stowe,
thundering against the evils of alcoholin 1826. We read medical
documents that show how the first stirrings of concern about about
what is now termed fetal-alcohol syndrome in 1910 turned public
opinion against drinking and helped move the country toward
Prohibition. The sections on illegal drugs contain surprises as
well.
With accessible, jargon-free introductions this anthology puts
drug and alcohol use at the center of American culture. At this
critical point in the "war on drugs" if we do not appreciate our
drug and alcohol history we may become captive to the powerful
emotions that lead to draconian repression, exaggeration, or apathy
and silence.
General
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