The Opium Den in Victorian London
Document Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
2004
Find this in a Library
Abstract
This chapter is from the book Smoke: A Global History of Smoking, which examines the culture of smoking in different traditions and locations around the world. From opium dens in Victorian England to tobacco in Edo period Japan, and from ganja and cocaine to Havana cigars, Smoke encompasses the subject as no book has before.
Based in cultural history, it employs a large number of images as part of its evidence: around 300 illustrations document smoking and smokers of many substances including tobacco, scented cigarettes, marijuana, opium and cocaine. The various essays examine the changing role of smoking in high and popular culture, ranging from images used in advertising to the legal and moral critiques of smoking, and from opera to the internet. Smoke will appeal to all those who smoke, all those who used to smoke, and all those who have tried, and failed, to give it up.
Repository Citation
Milligan, B.
(2004). The Opium Den in Victorian London. Smoke: A Global History of Smoking, 118-125.
https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/english/124