The politics of alcohol : a history of the drink question in England

Bibliographic Information

The politics of alcohol : a history of the drink question in England

James Nicholls

Manchester University Press , Distributed in the United States exclusively by Palgrave Macmillan, 2009

  • : hbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 263-277) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Questions about drink - how it is used, how it should be regulated and the social risks it presents - have been a source of sustained and heated dispute in recent years. In The politics of alcohol, Nicholls puts these concerns in historical context by providing a detailed and extensive survey of public debates on alcohol from the introduction of licensing in the mid-sixteenth century through to recent controversies over 24-hour licensing, binge drinking and the cheap sale of alcohol in supermarkets. In doing so, he shows that concerns over drinking have always been tied to broader questions about national identity, individual freedom and the relationship between government and the market. He argues that in order to properly understand the cultural status of alcohol we need to consider what attitudes to drinking tell us about the principles that underpin our modern, liberal society. The politics of alcohol presents a wide-ranging, accessible and critically illuminating guide to the social, political and cultural history of alcohol in England. Covering areas including law, public policy, medical thought, media representations and political philosophy, it will provide essential reading for anyone interested in either the history of alcohol consumption, alcohol policy or the complex social questions posed by drinking today. -- .

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. A monstrous plant: acohol and the Reformation 2. Healths, toasts and pledges: political drinking in the seventeenth century 3. A new kind of drunkenness: the gin craze 4. The politics of sobriety: coffee and politics in Georgian England 5. A fascinating poison: early medical writing on drink 6. Ungovernable passions: intoxication and Romanticism 7. Odious monopolies: power, control and the 1830 Beer Act 8. The last tyrant: the rise of temperance 9. A monstrous theory: the politics of prohibition 10. The state and the trade: the drink question at the turn of the century 10. Central control: war and nationalisation 11. The study of inebriety: medicine and the law 12. The pub and the people: drinking places and popular culture 13. Prevention and health: alcohol and public health 14. Beer orders: the changing landscape in the 1990s 15. Drinking responsibly: media, government and binge drinking Conclusion: the drink question today Index -- .

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