Throughout history, intoxicants were an important part of the war experience. The First World War was by no means an exception in that respect: its main "war drugs" were alcohol (mostly beer, brandy, rum, schnapps, wine, and vodka), morphine, and cocaine. These were both "prescribed" by military authorities and "self-prescribed" by soldiers. As in the past, the reasons for using drugs varied: from purely medical (killing the pain, anesthetizing, and energizing) to performance enhancement, from raising the fighting spirit to alleviating combat trauma, from strengthening bonds between companions to mitigating the fear of battle. Simultaneously and paradoxically, in many states temperance ideas gained in popularity and prohibitionist regulatio...
Since the Enlightenment, Anglo-American temperance thinkers—who were usually clergymen and physician...
The Vietnam War (1965 -1973) is sometimes referred to as the first ‘pharmacological war’, because th...
The predominant policy of prohibition (i.e. "War on Drugs") emerged in the early Twentieth Century. ...
Stimulants have long been known to enhance combat performance, keeping personnel awake, alert, and h...
Since ancient times, psychopharmacology has fueled armed conflicts and sustained fighting men. The p...
"Shooting Up" is a comprehensive and original history of the relationship between fighting men and i...
Day and night, soldiers in World War II were physically and mentally strained by fatigue and psychia...
Throughout history, at times, the politicians, media, and anti-drug activists have constructed the i...
The presence of drugged fighters is not unknown in the history of warfare. Yet widespread drug use o...
The article focuses on use of cocaine by military personnel during the war. Topics discussed include...
During the Vietnam War, the U.S. military plied its servicemen with speed, steroids, and painkillers...
Several historical and contemporary examples involving the relationship between alcohol use and the ...
The emergence of modern chemical weapons and chemical warfare is traditionally associated with World...
At the start of the Great War pharmacy and the pharmacy profession were as unprepared as everyone el...
Overseas trade and European expansion in the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries turned...
Since the Enlightenment, Anglo-American temperance thinkers—who were usually clergymen and physician...
The Vietnam War (1965 -1973) is sometimes referred to as the first ‘pharmacological war’, because th...
The predominant policy of prohibition (i.e. "War on Drugs") emerged in the early Twentieth Century. ...
Stimulants have long been known to enhance combat performance, keeping personnel awake, alert, and h...
Since ancient times, psychopharmacology has fueled armed conflicts and sustained fighting men. The p...
"Shooting Up" is a comprehensive and original history of the relationship between fighting men and i...
Day and night, soldiers in World War II were physically and mentally strained by fatigue and psychia...
Throughout history, at times, the politicians, media, and anti-drug activists have constructed the i...
The presence of drugged fighters is not unknown in the history of warfare. Yet widespread drug use o...
The article focuses on use of cocaine by military personnel during the war. Topics discussed include...
During the Vietnam War, the U.S. military plied its servicemen with speed, steroids, and painkillers...
Several historical and contemporary examples involving the relationship between alcohol use and the ...
The emergence of modern chemical weapons and chemical warfare is traditionally associated with World...
At the start of the Great War pharmacy and the pharmacy profession were as unprepared as everyone el...
Overseas trade and European expansion in the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries turned...
Since the Enlightenment, Anglo-American temperance thinkers—who were usually clergymen and physician...
The Vietnam War (1965 -1973) is sometimes referred to as the first ‘pharmacological war’, because th...
The predominant policy of prohibition (i.e. "War on Drugs") emerged in the early Twentieth Century. ...