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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Hans DerksPublisher: Brill Imprint: Brill Volume: 105 Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 5.00cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 1.425kg ISBN: 9789004221581ISBN 10: 9004221581 Pages: 826 Publication Date: 18 April 2012 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsPreface Content List of Illustrations, Tables, Figures and Maps PART ONE THE OPIUM PROBLEM PART TWO THE BRITISH ASSAULT PART THREE THE DUTCH ASSAULT PART FOUR THE FRENCH ASSAULT IN SOUTHEAST ASIA PART FIVE THE NEW IMPERIALISTS PART SIX THE VICTIMS PART SEVEN THE STORY OF THE SNAKE AND ITS TAIL APPENDICES GLOSSARY BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEXReviewsThis monumental volume clearly and comprehensively traces the evolution of the opium problem from 1600 throughout eastern Asia, with full attention to Europe and North America when they are pertinent. By opium problem historian Derks (Univ. of Utrecht, Netherlands) refers to a sociopathic combination of features that tend to occur whenever efforts at prohibition interrupt customary and medical uses of opium. Almost everywhere, aspects of the problem include rapid and immense profiteering by outsiders, rampant corruption of political and legal institutions, severe ethnic and religious prejudice, massive exploitation of poor laborers, and a consistent pattern of blaiming the victim so that that those who suffer most from those disruptons are scapegoated as supposedly having caused them. By closely analyzing the case histories of British, Dutch, French, Japanese, and US relations with each nation and major region throughout the eatern half of Asia, Derks convincingly lays bare a recurrent narco-military complex associated with colonialism (sometimes of the neo- variant), and does so without any shrill polemics. When evaluated in terms of what the author set out to do, this is an impressive compilation and analysis on an almost unimaginable scale, revealing part of the dark underbelly of globalization since the mid-1600s. Summing Up: Essential. All levels/libraries.-- D.B. Heath, Brown University, CHOICE, 50/3 'It is almost impossible to do justice to this massive volume in such a small space, just as it is almost impossible to read it without entering into an involuntary mental debate with the author, a debate that can be engaging and frustrating.' JOYCE A. MADANCY, Union College, <Journal of Asian Studies 72.4 (2013) This monumental volume clearly and comprehensively traces the evolution of the opium problem from 1600 throughout eastern Asia, with full attention to Europe and North America when they are pertinent. By opium problem historian Derks (Univ. of Utrecht, Netherlands) refers to a sociopathic combination of features that tend to occur whenever efforts at prohibition interrupt customary and medical uses of opium. Almost everywhere, aspects of the problem include rapid and immense profiteering by outsiders, rampant corruption of political and legal institutions, severe ethnic and religious prejudice, massive exploitation of poor laborers, and a consistent pattern of blaiming the victim so that that those who suffer most from those disruptons are scapegoated as supposedly having caused them. By closely analyzing the case histories of British, Dutch, French, Japanese, and US relations with each nation and major region throughout the eatern half of Asia, Derks convincingly lays bare a recurrent narco-military complex associated with colonialism (sometimes of the neo- variant), and does so without any shrill polemics. When evaluated in terms of what the author set out to do, this is an impressive compilation and analysis on an almost unimaginable scale, revealing part of the dark underbelly of globalization since the mid-1600s. Summing Up: Essential. All levels/libraries. - D.B. Heath, Brown University, in: CHOICE, 50/3 It is almost impossible to do justice to this massive volume in such a small space, just as it is almost impossible to read it without entering into an involuntary mental debate with the author, a debate that can be engaging and frustrating. - JOYCE A. MADANCY, Union College, in: Journal of Asian Studies 72.4 (2013) Author InformationHans Derks, historian and Doctor in the Social Sciences, University of Amsterdam (1986), was Senior Lecturer at the University of Utrecht and University of Surinam. He published about twenty books and numerous scholarly articles on European and Chinese history, the Second World War, and ancient Greek history, including Jew, Nomad or Pariah. Studies on Hannah Arendt's Choice (Aksant/Transactions, 2004). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |