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The Cigarette : A Political History / Sarah Milov.

By: Publisher: Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2019Description: 394 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780674241213
  • 9780674260313
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.4 MIL 23
LOC classification:
  • HD9149.C43 U663 2019
Contents:
Introduction 1. Tobacco in Industrializing America; 2. Tobacco’s New Deal; 3. Cultivating the Grower; 4. The Challenge of the Public Interest; 5. Inventing the Nonsmoker; 6. From Rights to Cost; 7. Shredding a Net to Build a Web; Conclusion: “Weeds Are Hard to Kill”: The Future of Tobacco Politics; Notes Acknowledgments Index
Summary: The Cigarette: A Political History offers a fresh interpretation of tobacco's role in the twentieth century. It argues that tobacco played a vital and emblematic role in the history of twentieth century political economy. Far from being unregulated, tobacco was the most controlled and supported commodity produced in the United States during the twentieth century. The federal tobacco program was remarkably long lived, lasting nearly seven decades and ending only in 2004. By the 1960s, criticisms of the Tobacco industry and its state support were ubiquitous. Under the banner of "non-smokers' rights," by the mid-1970s activists began to rack up an impressive string of victories in curtailing public smoking at the local and state levels. By the final decades of the twentieth century, debates over tobacco were waged primarily on the terrain of its social cost. By placing tobacco at the center of American political economy, The Cigarette: A Political History joins the politics of the body to the American body politic.-- Provided by publisher
List(s) this item appears in: NAAC 2021-22 | JULY 2022 RAMESH
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Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode
BOOKs BOOKs National Law School NAB Compactor 338.4 MIL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 38623

Introduction
1. Tobacco in Industrializing America;
2. Tobacco’s New Deal;
3. Cultivating the Grower;
4. The Challenge of the Public Interest;
5. Inventing the Nonsmoker;
6. From Rights to Cost;
7. Shredding a Net to Build a Web;
Conclusion: “Weeds Are Hard to Kill”: The Future of Tobacco Politics;
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index

The Cigarette: A Political History offers a fresh interpretation of tobacco's role in the twentieth century. It argues that tobacco played a vital and emblematic role in the history of twentieth century political economy. Far from being unregulated, tobacco was the most controlled and supported commodity produced in the United States during the twentieth century. The federal tobacco program was remarkably long lived, lasting nearly seven decades and ending only in 2004. By the 1960s, criticisms of the Tobacco industry and its state support were ubiquitous. Under the banner of "non-smokers' rights," by the mid-1970s activists began to rack up an impressive string of victories in curtailing public smoking at the local and state levels. By the final decades of the twentieth century, debates over tobacco were waged primarily on the terrain of its social cost. By placing tobacco at the center of American political economy, The Cigarette: A Political History joins the politics of the body to the American body politic.-- Provided by publisher

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