Selling cocaine in Colonial India : industry, commerce and capitalism, 1885 to 1911
Mills, Jim (2026) Selling cocaine in Colonial India : industry, commerce and capitalism, 1885 to 1911. Itinerario. pp. 1-17. ISSN 2041-2827 (https://doi.org/10.1017/S0165115326100485)
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Abstract
This paper will trace the arrival of cocaine in colonial South Asia between 1885 and 1911. It argues that across that period two separate and distinct markets developed, one after the other. The first was a straightforward medical market, the second a more complex one, where the substance was made available beyond anything that resembled a formal medical context, to consumers who had uses for it other than the strictly therapeutic. This market had emerged by the end of the 1890s and endured until the Second World War. The study engages with David Courtwright’s ideas about the nature of ‘limbic capitalism,’ arguing that the sudden arrival of a novel therapeutic in a complex context at this time is the ideal place to see how far those ideas are useful to historians.
ORCID iDs
Mills, Jim
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9384-2087;
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Item type: Article ID code: 95914 Dates: DateEvent30 March 2026Published30 March 2026Published Online21 September 2025Accepted16 November 2023SubmittedSubjects: History General and Old World Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Humanities > History Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 31 Mar 2026 07:44 Last modified: 02 Jun 2026 06:51 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/95914
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