This introduction to the special issue proposes that two discrete nineteenth-century histories of opium – a literary history, initiated by the drug confessions of De Quincey, and a colonial history, exemplified by the commercial activities of the East India Company (in which Thomas Love Peacock participated) in cultivating opium in Bengal for export to China, leading to the first Opium War – are common elements in a nineteenth-century ‘opium complex’, a set of interlocking practices of individuals and (quasi)state actors, extending across the globe. Sherlock Holmes detective stories are read as compressed registers of tensions that inhere in this complex
The article examines Inner Asia's drug problem, which arose in the nineteenth century during the Chi...
The eighteenth and nineteenth century saw the meeting to two waves in Southeast Asia. One was the mo...
This article discusses the overlap between British Indian networks of postal communication and trade...
In early 19th-century Britain, opium was the aspirin and benzodiazepine of its day. It was available...
The aim of this paper is to review conceptual and methodological issues surrounding the study of the...
This chapter discusses the drug opium in the Romantic period. It covers the use of opium by Romamtic...
Opium is more than just a drug extracted from poppies. Over the past two centuries it has been a pal...
Opium trade acted as the backbone of the East India Company’s financial gains in South-East Asia acc...
This essay situates Thomas De Quincey's essay 'On the Opium and the China Question' published in Bla...
From its rise in the 1830s to its pinnacle in the 1930s, the opium trade was a guiding force in the ...
This paper explores Thomas De Quincey's seminal text Confessions of an English Opium Eater, examinin...
Between 1839 and 1842, the southem Chinese port city of Canton was the primary staging ground of one...
Abstract: As is well known, opium was a major colonial commodity. It was linked to trade in several ...
This essay discusses the public debate surrounding the First Opium War with China of 1840-42. It fea...
This article will consider the reasons for the inclusion of cocaine in the Hague Opium Convention of...
The article examines Inner Asia's drug problem, which arose in the nineteenth century during the Chi...
The eighteenth and nineteenth century saw the meeting to two waves in Southeast Asia. One was the mo...
This article discusses the overlap between British Indian networks of postal communication and trade...
In early 19th-century Britain, opium was the aspirin and benzodiazepine of its day. It was available...
The aim of this paper is to review conceptual and methodological issues surrounding the study of the...
This chapter discusses the drug opium in the Romantic period. It covers the use of opium by Romamtic...
Opium is more than just a drug extracted from poppies. Over the past two centuries it has been a pal...
Opium trade acted as the backbone of the East India Company’s financial gains in South-East Asia acc...
This essay situates Thomas De Quincey's essay 'On the Opium and the China Question' published in Bla...
From its rise in the 1830s to its pinnacle in the 1930s, the opium trade was a guiding force in the ...
This paper explores Thomas De Quincey's seminal text Confessions of an English Opium Eater, examinin...
Between 1839 and 1842, the southem Chinese port city of Canton was the primary staging ground of one...
Abstract: As is well known, opium was a major colonial commodity. It was linked to trade in several ...
This essay discusses the public debate surrounding the First Opium War with China of 1840-42. It fea...
This article will consider the reasons for the inclusion of cocaine in the Hague Opium Convention of...
The article examines Inner Asia's drug problem, which arose in the nineteenth century during the Chi...
The eighteenth and nineteenth century saw the meeting to two waves in Southeast Asia. One was the mo...
This article discusses the overlap between British Indian networks of postal communication and trade...