Cocaine: An Unauthorized Biography

by Dominic Streatfeild

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Cocaine has started wars, prompted invasions, embarrassed politicians, toppled governments, filled prisons, created billionaires, fuelled parties, bankrupted countries and taken thousands of lives. All because of a small, unremarkable-looking shrub. Dominic Streatfeild's highly-praised and comprehensive study examines the history of the world's most popular, most problematic drug, from its origins with the Incas, to early enthusiasts including Freud, and the multi-million pound industry it show more is today. His journey takes him from the darkest corners of the British Library to the isolation cells of America's most secure prisons, from the crack houses of New York to the deepest jungles of South America, as he meets the economists, scientists, law enforcers, historians and traffickers who are involved in policing - and running - the cocaine trade. show less

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7 reviews
Cocaine: An Unauthorized Biography by Dominic Streatfeild explores the history of cocaine starting with the chewing of coca leaves by the natives of South America. Coca's history, use, misuse, and abuse is a fascinating tale of how humans can take something good and corrupt it with just a little effort. The effects of imperialism on the coca plant and its transition into cocaine and the various forms of cocaine are scary and yet somehow felt unavoidable. I was torn between what I thought I knew and what the facts and evidence show in regards to the coca plant, cocaine use, and cocaine trafficking based on Streatfeild's research. The intersection of political aspirations and cocaine is incredibly disheartening leaving one to wonder just show more how much those in power drove or at least ignored cocaine trafficking for political benefit. As I reached the latter part of the book, the realization kept coming to me that criminalizing cocaine and other drugs created the prices that made trafficking so tempting to so many. Criminalizing the use of drugs rather than seeing it as a medical issue has created so many problems for so many places all around the world. Using drug trafficking as a control mechanism over countries dooms those countries to poverty and dependence on other countries. While Streatfeild never explicitly lays out a plan to decriminalize drugs, it was easy to imagine how a shift in perspective about the use of the coca plant could lead to viable economies for those countries where coca is easy (and in some places the only real option) to grow to trade with other countries through the interviews he shared. Cocaine showed me how easy it is to fall into a fear trap and how easily those fear traps can be released with a little information. Streatfeild demonstrates how various governments and the media worked together, sometimes wittingly sometimes unwittingly, to scare people into thinking the drug problem was much more pervasive and deadly than it actually was and to point fingers at populations that were easy to punch down at rather than addressing the real issues that lead to drug use in the first place. Cocaine is a fascinating, if sometimes tedious, look into how a harmless plant became the big, bad evil because of human interference. show less
The first three chapters were exactly the information I was looking for, then it digressed into other areas. This guy was hoping to do some ' gonzo ' journalism I think ( that just doesn't work when you're British, sorry )
The first three chapters were exactly the information I was looking for, then it digressed into other areas. This guy was hoping to do some ' gonzo ' journalism I think ( that just doesn't work when you're British, sorry )
Good book.

Presents material in a way that makes it a fun read, rather than horribly bland and dry (book research must've horrible for the author).

The book, as the title suggests (outright states), gives a history of cocaine. From coca leaves to anesthetic, to illegal drug. Shows motivations and events leading to current state of cocaine and the coca plant.
Highly recommended. An entertaining education. A history of the leaf and the drug. Complete review of COCAINE is available at my book review blog: http://www.tgblogger.com/?p=484.
why wasn't this in my list already ?
Om kokainets och Colombias historia.

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4 Works 576 Members
Dominic Streatfeild is a documentary film producer and writer. He lives in London

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Cocaine: An Unauthorized Biography
Original publication date
2001
First words
(Introduction): It's going on 4:30 p. m. and the alkaloid has just begun to bite.
Erythroxylum coca is a peculiarly ordinary-looking shrub native to South America.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)I grabbed my notepad and started to write: It's going on 4:30 p. m. and the alkaloid has just begun to bite ...

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, History
DDC/MDS
362.29809Society, Government, and CultureSocial problems and social servicesSocial WelfareMental illnessSubstance abuse
LCC
QP801 .C68 .S77SciencePhysiologyPhysiologyAnimal biochemistry
BISAC

Statistics

Members
296
Popularity
108,081
Reviews
7
Rating
(4.12)
Languages
Czech, English, Hungarian
Media
Paper
ISBNs
6
ASINs
3