"Shooting Up" is a comprehensive and original history of the relationship between fighting men and intoxicants, from Antiquity till the present day. Lukasz Kamienski explores why and how drugs have been issued to soldiers to increase their battlefield performance, boost their courage and alleviate stress and fear - as well as for medical purposes. He also delves into the history of psychoactive substances that combatants "self-prescribe", namely those taken either for self-medication, recreation or to improve fighting capabilities, most notoriously by GIs in the Vietnam War, but also as far back as the Vikings. From hallucinogenic mushrooms to LSD, from opium to opioids, from coca to cocaine, from amphetamines to ecstasy; from Homeric warri...
Day and night, soldiers in World War II were physically and mentally strained by fatigue and psychia...
Promoters of Moral Enhancement have argued that it is necessary for people to use consciousness-alte...
Hecker T, Haer R. Drugs Boosting Conflict? A Micro-Level Test of the Linkage Between Substance Use a...
From hallucinogenic mushrooms and LSD, to coca and cocaine; from Homeric warriors and the Assassins ...
From alcohol to LSD, Łukasz Kamieński takes readers on a unique 300-page journey through the history...
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...
Review of the military-related work Shooting Up: A Short History of Drugs and Wa
The presence of drugged fighters is not unknown in the history of warfare. Yet widespread drug use o...
Throughout history, intoxicants were an important part of the war experience. The First World War wa...
The emergence of modern chemical weapons and chemical warfare is traditionally associated with World...
There is growing alarm over how drugs increasingly empower terrorists, insurgents, traffickers, and ...
Throughout history, at times, the politicians, media, and anti-drug activists have constructed the i...
During the Vietnam War, the U.S. military plied its servicemen with speed, steroids, and painkillers...
The Vietnam War (1965 -1973) is sometimes referred to as the first ‘pharmacological war’, because th...
Day and night, soldiers in World War II were physically and mentally strained by fatigue and psychia...
Promoters of Moral Enhancement have argued that it is necessary for people to use consciousness-alte...
Hecker T, Haer R. Drugs Boosting Conflict? A Micro-Level Test of the Linkage Between Substance Use a...
From hallucinogenic mushrooms and LSD, to coca and cocaine; from Homeric warriors and the Assassins ...
From alcohol to LSD, Łukasz Kamieński takes readers on a unique 300-page journey through the history...
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...
Review of the military-related work Shooting Up: A Short History of Drugs and Wa
The presence of drugged fighters is not unknown in the history of warfare. Yet widespread drug use o...
Throughout history, intoxicants were an important part of the war experience. The First World War wa...
The emergence of modern chemical weapons and chemical warfare is traditionally associated with World...
There is growing alarm over how drugs increasingly empower terrorists, insurgents, traffickers, and ...
Throughout history, at times, the politicians, media, and anti-drug activists have constructed the i...
During the Vietnam War, the U.S. military plied its servicemen with speed, steroids, and painkillers...
The Vietnam War (1965 -1973) is sometimes referred to as the first ‘pharmacological war’, because th...
Day and night, soldiers in World War II were physically and mentally strained by fatigue and psychia...
Promoters of Moral Enhancement have argued that it is necessary for people to use consciousness-alte...
Hecker T, Haer R. Drugs Boosting Conflict? A Micro-Level Test of the Linkage Between Substance Use a...