Yesterday's Addicts: American Society and Drug Abuse 1865-1920

Read ^ Yesterdays Addicts: American Society and Drug Abuse 1865-1920 PDF by * Univ of Oklahoma Pr eBook or Kindle ePUB Online free. Yesterdays Addicts: American Society and Drug Abuse 1865-1920 Yesterday’s Addicts: American Society and Drug Abuse 1865–1920 examines the roots of drug abuse in the United States from the end of the Civil War to the end of World War I. Through contemporary articles and reports, this book focuses on public attitudes toward drug abuse, different forms of drug abuse, firsthand accounts by drug abusers, and reasons why the United States has attempted to control drug abuse.   H. Morgan also explores in detail the threat that drug abuse m

Yesterday's Addicts: American Society and Drug Abuse 1865-1920

Author :
Rating : 4.27 (650 Votes)
Asin : 0806111356
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 228 Pages
Publish Date : 0000-00-00
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

normally a happy guy said Five Stars. Anyone interested in understanding the drug war would benefit by starting here. Fascinating bit of history.

Yesterday’s Addicts: American Society and Drug Abuse 1865–1920 examines the roots of drug abuse in the United States from the end of the Civil War to the end of World War I. Through contemporary articles and reports, this book focuses on public attitudes toward drug abuse, different forms of drug abuse, firsthand accounts by drug abusers, and reasons why the United States has attempted to control drug abuse.   H. Morgan also explores in detail the threat that drug abuse may pose to the efficient production of both goods and ideas by removing people from the mainstream of reality.. One assumption is that a drug abuser is in a sense a slave, devoid of free will, and is thus in a situation that runs counter to America’s historic emphasis on individualism. Wayne Morgan argues that public fear of drug abuse rests on several assumptions, all of which relate closely to American ideals and purposes. And it suggests that in the decades since World War I hardly anything has changed

“An important contribution to American social history. This book should be of interest to undergraduates and the general public.”—Choice

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