Living on Borrowed Time
Opium in Canton, 1906–1936 (CRM 74)
Xavier Paulès, Noel Castelino, trans.
Publication date: 2017
ISBN-13 (print): 978-1-55729-174-5
ISBN-10 (print): 1-55729-174-8
ISBN-13 (e-book): 978-1-55729-175-2
Series: China Research Monographs
This comprehensive microhistory of opium in Canton from the late Qing to Republican period examines the infamous drug from the perspective of material, political, economic, and social history. Paulès traces the transformation of the drug from elite habit to national shame. Translated from the original French, Histoire d’une drogue en sursis: L’opium à Canton, 1906–1936 (EHESS, 2010).
This comprehensive microhistory of opium in Canton from the late Qing to Republican period examines the infamous drug from the perspective of material, political, economic, and social history. Paulès traces the transformation of the drug from elite habit to national shame, arguing that the marginalization of opium occurred well before 1949. This monograph covers the drug’s material history and practices, the contradictory politics and economics of opium revenue, the spaces of consumption, and anti-opium propanganda that created the image of the degenerate opium smoker. Translated from the original French, Histoire d’une drogue en sursis: L’opium à Canton, 1906–1936 (EHESS, 2010).
Pages: 334
Language: English
Publisher: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley
Xavier Paulès
Xavier Paulès is the director of the Centre d’études sur la Chine moderne et contemporaine (CECMC) at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Science Sociales (EHESS) in Paris, France. His research focuses on the urban history of contemporary China and the history of opium and gambling. He has published in French, English, and Chinese.
Noel Castelino, trans.
Noel Castelino specializes in translations from French to English for academic publications relating to Chinese studies. His translations include Christian Henriot’s Shanghai, 1927-1937 (UC Press, 1993) and Prostitution and Sexuality in Shanghai (Cambridge UP, 2001).