Commodifying Cannabis: A Cultural History of a Complex Plant in the Atlantic World is a 2018 nonfiction book by Bradley J Borougerdi about the historical and present commodification of Cannabis by society and the industry. It examines in particular "the connection between ancient uses of cannabis and our more recent social and cultural contexts" in the Anglo-American Atlantic world, and "the trajectory of cannabis commodification in the early modern period, the prohibition of cannabis in the nineteenth century, and the recent re-commodification of cannabis".[1] The book, incorporating three centuries of source material, is based on the author's PhD dissertation "Cord of Empire, Exotic Intoxicant: Hemp and Culture in the Atlantic World, 1600–1900". Borougerdi received his degree from University of Texas at Austin Department of History, advised by Christopher Morris.[2]

Commodifying Cannabis
AuthorBradley J Borougerdi
SubjectEthnobotany, Cannabis industry
GenreNonfiction
Published2018
PublisherLexington Books
Pages185
ISBN9781498586375
OCLC1048950003
Websiterowman.com/ISBN/9781498586399/Commodifying-Cannabis-A-Cultural-History-of-a-Complex-Plant-in-the-Atlantic-World

Reception

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The book is one of six books selected in Florida Gulf Coast University's cannabis industry research guide,[3] and one of three business books in the cannabis research guide, "Recommended sources to research the business of cannabis" at the University of Washington Libraries.[4]

A review published by the Alcohol and Drugs History Society and the American Institute of the History of Pharmacy said the book provides valuable insight about the importance of "global knowledge flows to our understanding of cultural commodities",[1] a view echoed in the book Taming Cannabis that cites Commodifdying Cannabis as "shed[ding] additional light on this vital role played by hemp within the competition of Great Powers in early modern Europe" and in understanding the European colonization of North Africa.[5]

A review in the Journal of American History calls the book "a sophisticated and welcome addition to the growing body of scholarship on marijuana".[6]

Further reading

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References

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  1. ^ a b Beach, Bob (March 10, 2021). "Review: "Commodifying Cannabis: A Cultural History of a Complex Plant in the Atlantic World"". Points joint blog. The Alcohol and Drugs History Society and the American Institute of the History of Pharmacy.
  2. ^ UTA Alumnus publishes history of cannabis, University of Texas at Austin Department of History, December 7, 2018
  3. ^ "Cannabis industry books". Research Guides. Florida Gulf Coast University. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  4. ^ "Cannabis research guide". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  5. ^ Guba, David A. Jr. (2020). Taming Cannabis: Drugs and Empire in Nineteenth-Century France. McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0228002567. recent works by historians Bradley Bourougerdi and Nick Mattingly have shed additional light on this vital role played by hemp within the competition of Great Powers in early modern Europe.
  6. ^ Maguire, Peter (2020), "Commodifying Cannabis: A Cultural History of a Complex Plant in the Atlantic World", Journal of American History, 107 (2): 433–434, doi:10.1093/jahist/jaaa251
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