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Learning to Smoke: Tobacco Use in the West
 
 
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Learning to Smoke: Tobacco Use in the West [Hardcover]

Jason Hughes (Author)

Price: $35.00 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

February 15, 2003 0226359107 978-0226359106 1
Why do people smoke? Taking a unique approach to this question, Jason Hughes moves beyond the usual focus on biological addiction that dominates news coverage and public health studies and invites us to reconsider how social and personal understandings of smoking crucially affect the way people experience it. Learning to Smoke examines the diverse sociological and cultural processes that have compelled people to smoke since the practice was first introduced to the West during the sixteenth century.

Hughes traces the transformations of tobacco and its use over time, from its role as a hallucinogen in Native American shamanistic ritual to its use as a prophylactic against the plague and a cure for cancer by early Europeans, and finally to the current view of smoking as a global pandemic. He then analyzes tobacco from the perspective of the individual user, exploring how its consumption relates to issues of identity and life changes. Comparing sociocultural and personal experiences, Hughes ultimately asks what the patterns of tobacco use mean for the clinical treatment of smokers and for public policy on smoking. Pointing the way, then, to a more learned and sophisticated understanding of tobacco use, this study will prove to be essential reading for anyone interested in the history of smoking and the sociology of addiction.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Hughes makes an excellent effort simultaneously to fill an embarrassing gap in the sociological literature regarding tobacco use and to demonstrate that tobacco use cannot be adequately addressed solely from a clinical perspective.”—Brian M. Lowe, Contemporary Sociology
(Brian M. Lowe Contemporary Sociology )

Learning to Smoke makes very original arguments about the use of tobacco in Western societies. Mindful of major sociological theories and nicely supported by a wealth of historical documentation, this study will find an enthusiastic audience among both specialists and anyone interested in the smoking problem.” (Howard Becker, author of Outsiders )

Learning to Smoke explores the smoking problem in a way that sets it apart from other sociological works about addiction. Looking at the experience of smoking in a variety of different historical and cultural contexts, Hughes lays out the long term development of tobacco use in the West to show how its once common reputation as a panacea gave way to its current standing as pandemic.”
(Joseph Gusfield, author of The Culture of Public Problems )

From the Inside Flap

Why do people smoke? Taking a unique approach to this question, Jason Hughes moves beyond the usual focus on biological addiction that dominates news coverage and public health studies and invites us to reconsider how social and personal understandings of smoking crucially affect the way people experience it. Learning to Smoke examines the diverse sociological and cultural processes that have compelled people to smoke since the practice was first introduced to the West during the sixteenth century.

Hughes traces the transformations of tobacco and its use over time, from its role as a hallucinogen in Native American shamanistic ritual to its use as a prophylactic against the plague and a cure for cancer by early Europeans, and finally to the current view of smoking as a global pandemic. He then analyzes tobacco from the perspective of the individual user, exploring how its consumption relates to issues of identity and life changes. Comparing sociocultural and personal experiences, Hughes ultimately asks what the patterns of tobacco use mean for the clinical treatment of smokers and for public policy on smoking. Pointing the way, then, to a more learned and sophisticated understanding of tobacco use, this study will prove to be essential reading for anyone interested in the history of smoking and the sociology of addiction.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Why do people smoke? Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
surrounding tobacco use, clinical medical discourse, consuming tobacco, specific causality, smokeless cigarette, tobacco corporations, social proscriptions, tobacco consumed, tobacco users, clinical gaze, most popular mode, postgraduate researcher, tobacco consumption
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Native American, United States, Middle Ages, New World, Beginning Smoking, Silk Cut, Karuk Indians, Lucky Strike, Marlboro Lights, Michel Foucault, New York, Old Smoker, Virginia Slims
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