22 Matching Annotations
- Oct 2024
-
library.scholarcy.com library.scholarcy.com
-
alcohol was a normal part of social life
-
obacco, introduced in the 16th century, became a mass consumption c
-
US, where addiction was often linked to medical prescription, in Britain, opium use was more widespread and not necessarily connected to medical practice.
-
focus was on the quality of the drug and the lack of standardization, which led to accidental overdoses.
-
infant deaths were due to opium poisoning.
-
opium use was a normal part of everyday life in 19th-century England.
-
-
library.scholarcy.com library.scholarcy.com
-
hypodermic syringe
-
often blamed the individual for their condition rather than acknowledging the role of external factors.
-
"addiction" eventually became widely accepted as the medical diagnosis of habitual narcotic use as a threatening and modern disease.
-
he Society for the Suppression of the Opium Trade was founded in 1874, focusing on the economic and moral aspects of the trade.
-
spread of opium smoking in England, particularly among the working class.
-
dens were seen as a threat to the English
-
opium use also reinforced the debt-labor system that bound them to exploitative merchants and criminal societies.
-
The anti-alcohol temperance movement,
-
medical concern about its consequences began to rise.
-
transatlantic adoption of the addiction concept by the First World War signaled the emergence of an Anglo-American conception of dangerous drugs
-
-
library.scholarcy.com library.scholarcy.com
-
illicit consumption characterized by decadence and excess.
-
"anti-narcotic nationalism" in France.
-
n the late 1870s, attitudes towards psychotropic experimentation began to change with the introduction of new medical research on the dangers of addiction.
-
new drug legislation in 1916, criminalizing the consumption of drugs in public
-
deviant behaviors that would weaken and corrupt the French population and empire.
-
degeneration of France's population led to new medical research on the dangers of morphine addiction, alarming doctors and social reformers.
-