Erowid
 
 
Plants - Drugs Mind - Spirit Freedom - Law Arts - Culture Library  
Modern humans must learn how to relate to psychoactives
responsibly, treating them with respect and awareness,
working to minimize harms and maximize benefits, and
integrating use into a healthy, enjoyable, and productive life.
cover image
Opium and the Romantic Imagination
Rating :
rating
Author(s) :
Alethea Hayter
Pages :
219
Pub Date :
1989
Edition(s) at Erowid :
---(---)
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press
ISBN :
0521373751
BACK COVER #
Ron Brunton revives a long neglected problem posed by the great anthropologist W.H.R. Rivers in History of Melanesian Society (1914): how to explain the strange geographical distribution of kava, a narcotic drink once widely consumed by south-west Pacific islanders. Rivers believed that it was abandoned by many people even before European contact in favour of another drug, betel, drawing his speculations from the ideas of the diffusionist school of anthropology. But Dr Brunton disagrees. Taking the varying fortunes of kava on the island of Tanna, Vanuata, as his starting point, he suggests that kava's abandonment can best be explained in terms of its association with unstable religious cults, and not becuase of the adoption of betel. The problem of kava is therefore part of a broader problem of why many traditional Melanesian societies were characteristically highly unstable, and Dr Brunton sees this instability as both an outcome and a cause of weak institutions of authority and social coordination.