When good drugs go bad : opium, medicine, and the origins of Canada's drug laws / Dan Malleck.
2015
KE3720 .M35 2015 (Map It)
Available at Cellar
Formats
Format | |
---|---|
BibTeX | |
MARCXML | |
TextMARC | |
MARC | |
DublinCore | |
EndNote | |
NLM | |
RefWorks | |
RIS |
Items
Details
Author
Title
When good drugs go bad : opium, medicine, and the origins of Canada's drug laws / Dan Malleck.
Published
Vancouver : UBC Press, 2015.
Call Number
KE3720 .M35 2015
ISBN
9780774829205
0774829206
9780774829199 (bound ; alk. paper)
0774829192 (bound ; alk. paper)
0774829206
9780774829199 (bound ; alk. paper)
0774829192 (bound ; alk. paper)
Description
xi, 305 pages ; 23 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)895731071
Summary
"Throughout the 1800s, opium and cocaine could be easily obtained to treat a range of ailments in Canada. Dependency, when it occurred, was considered a matter of personal vice. Near the end of the century, attitudes shifted and access to drugs became more restricted. How did this happen? In this intoxicating history, Dan Malleck examines the conditions that lead to Canada's current drug laws. Drawing on newspaper accounts, medical and pharmacy journals, professional association records, asylum records, physician case books, and pharmacy records, Malleck demonstrates how a number of social, economic, and cultural forces converged in the early 1900s to influence lawmakers and criminalize addiction. His research exposes how social concerns about drug addiction had less to do with the long pipe and shadowy den than with lobbying by medical professionals, concern about the morality and future of the nation, and a growing pharmaceutical industry."-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
List of Tables and Figures
viii
Acknowledgments
ix
Introduction: Its Baneful Influences
3
1.
Medicating Canada before Regulation
13
2.
Opium in Nineteenth-Century Medical Knowledge
29
3.
Canada's First Drug Laws
53
4.
Chinese Opium Smoking and Threats to the Nation
84
5.
Medicine, Addiction, and Ideas of Nation
109
6.
Madness and Addiction in the Asylums of English Canada
137
7.
Proprietary Medicines and the Nation's Health
167
8.
Regulating Proprietary Medicine
194
9.
Drug Laws and the Creation of Illegality
214
Conclusion: Baneful Influences
245
Notes
250
Bibliography
286
Index
296