According to the World Health Organization, approximately
seventy percent of men and thirty percent of women in Russia smoke,
and the WHO estimated that at the close of the twentieth century
280,000 Russians died every year from smoking-related illnesses a
rate over three times higher than the global average. The
demographic crisis in current Russia has occasioned interest by
President Putin in health care efforts and by historians in the
source of these problems. Tobacco in Russian History and Culture
explores tobacco s role in Russian culture through a
multidisciplinary approach starting with the growth of tobacco
consumption from its first introduction in the seventeenth century
until its pandemic status in the current post-Soviet health
crisis.
The essays as a group emphasize the ways in which, from earliest
contact, tobacco s status as a "foreign" commodity forced Russians
to confront their national, political, and economic interests in
its acceptance or rejection and find there markers of gender,
class, or political identity. International contributors from the
fields of history, literature, sociology, and economics fully
present the dramatic impact of the weed called the "blossom from
the womb of the daughter of Jezebel."
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