Her work is both fascinating for the casual reader and challenging for those who want a deeper understanding of substance abuse, its history and its context

Druglink Magazine, Ian Wardle

[A] thought provoking history

Judith Flanders, The Sunday Telegraph

Entertaining

Sean O'Grady, The Independent

Tabloid headlines attack the binge drinking of young women. Debates about the classification of cannabis continue, while major public health campaigns seek to reduce and ultimately eliminate smoking through health warnings and legislation. But the history of public health is not a simple one of changing attitudes resulting from increased medical knowledge, though that has played a key role, for instance since the identification of the link between smoking and lung cancer. As Virginia Berridge shows in this fascinating exploration, attitudes to public health, and efforts to change it, have historically been driven by social, cultural, political, and economic and industrial factors, as well as advances in science. They have resulted in different responses to drugs, alcohol, and tobacco at different times, in different parts of the world. Opium dens in London, temperance and prohibition movements, the appearance of new recreational drugs in the 20th century, the changing attitudes to smoking: by taking us through such examples, moulded by socio-economic and political forces, including the growing power of pharmaceutical companies, Berridge illuminates current debates. While our medical knowledge has advanced, other factors help shape our responses, as they have done in the past.
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In Demons, Virginia Berridge explores the factors that have affected social attitudes to tobacco, alcohol, and a variety of drugs, through history. Gender, class, and political context have all played a part in a debate that continues today in concerns about binge drinking in the young and the classification of cannabis.
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1. Past and Present ; 2. Culture: Drugs for all ; 3. Social Movements: Temperance ; 4. Professions: over the counter or disease? ; 5. Fear: the opium den ; 6. Industry ; 7. International arenas ; 8. Prohibition? ; 9. Changing cultures ; 10. Convergence across the substances?
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Considers varying attitudes to the use of drugs, tobacco, and alcohol from the 19th century to the present day Looks at how and why various substances have been regulated differently over time in different places Considers recent debates in public health in the light of historical changing attitudes
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Virginia Berridge is Professor of History and Director of the Centre for History in Public Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University of London. She has published widely on the history of illicit drugs, smoking, and alcohol and has worked in both historical and non-historical settings.
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Considers varying attitudes to the use of drugs, tobacco, and alcohol from the 19th century to the present day Looks at how and why various substances have been regulated differently over time in different places Considers recent debates in public health in the light of historical changing attitudes
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Product details

ISBN
9780199604982
Published
2013
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Weight
494 gr
Height
221 mm
Width
148 mm
Thickness
29 mm
Age
G, 01
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
304

Biographical note

Virginia Berridge is Professor of History and Director of the Centre for History in Public Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University of London. She has published widely on the history of illicit drugs, smoking, and alcohol and has worked in both historical and non-historical settings.