1st Edition

Cocaine Global Histories

Edited By Paul Gootenberg Copyright 1999
    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    Cocaine examines the rise and fall of this notorious substance from its legitimate use by scientists and medics in the nineteenth century to the international prohibitionist regimes and drug gangs of today. Themes explored include:
    * Amsterdam's complex cocaine culture
    * the manufacture, sale and control of cocaine in the United States
    * Japan and the Southeast Asian cocaine industry
    * export of cocaine prohibitions to Peru
    * sex, drugs and race in early modern London
    Cocaine unveils new primary sources and covert social, cultural and political transformations to shed light on cocaine's hidden history.

    Notes on contributors, Foreword, Acknowledgments, I Introduction: cocaine: the hidden histories, PART I Amer-Andean connections (the United States, Peru), PART II European axis, Asian circuits (Gennany, Britain, the Netherlands andJava, Japan), PART III The new American nexus (CoiolDbia, Mexico), Bibliography, Index

    Biography

    Paul Gootenberg is Professor of History at the State University of New York, Stony Brook, and author of Between Silver and Guano (Princeton, 1989) and Imagining Development (California, 1993).

    'This is a very good book which deserves publishing success.'- Addiction

    'Paul Gootenburg has edited a collection of essays ... of a high standard of research, insight and analysis.' - - R. Davenport-Hines, TLS