Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 208
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8476-9597-3 • Hardback • November 1999 • $136.00 • (£105.00)
978-0-8476-9598-0 • Paperback • January 2000 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Zhou Yongming is associate professor of anthropology, University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Nationalism, Reform, and Anti-Opium Mobilization in Late Qing
Chapter 3 Nationalism and the Anti-Drug Mobilization of the Shanghai Elite, 1924–1927
Chapter 4 Society Versus State: NAOA and Opium Policies of the Nationalists, 1927–1934
Chapter 5 The Six-Year Opium Suppression Plan and the New Life Movement
Chapter 6 Nationalism, Identity, and State Building: Anti-Drug Crusades in the People's Republic, 1949–1952
Chapter 7 Facing drugs Again: Anti-Drug Discourse in Contemporary China
Chapter 8 A “Peoples War” without People: Anti-Drug Campaigns in the 1990s
Chapter 9 Anti-Drug Campaigns and Ethnic Minorities in Southwestern China: 1950s and 1990s
Chapter 10 Conclusions
Chapter 11 Notes
Chapter 12 Bibliography
Chapter 13 Index
Chapter 14 About the Author
The first book-length study of opium suppression in twentieth century China. . . . The book presents much useful information on the topic.
— Journal of Asian Studies
Zhou is practically effective at showing how the circumstances leading to the Opium Wars and China's humiliating defeat have provided a leitmotif for all subsequent discourse concerning narcotics. Zhou does a convincing job of illustrating his main contention—that anti-drug disclosure and anti-drug activity are most fruitfully examined in their social, cultural, and political contexts. Many of his points are so well made that they beg for comparative studies that would allow scholars to see whether the explanatory tools that work so well for China apply in other settings. Drug researchers as well as anthropologists and students of China will find this book worth reading.
— American Ethnologist
This is a handy and informative book on an important aspect of 20th-century China.
— China Quarterly
This is a useful and readable book. Succinctly and lucidly written, Anti-Drug Crusades in Twentieth-Century China tells an interesting story that will be welcomed by China scholars and all those interested in narcotics research.
— The China Journal