Hooked: Drug War Films in Britain, Canada, and the U.S.Routledge, 2010年9月13日 - 262 頁 Drug prohibition emerged at the same time as the discovery of film, and their histories intersect in interesting ways. This book examines the ideological assumptions embedded in the narrative and imagery of one hundred fictional drug films produced in Britain, Canada, and the U.S. from 1912 to 2006, including Broken Blossoms, Reefer Madness, The Trip, Superfly, Withnail and I, Traffik, Traffic, Layer Cake, Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle, Trailer Park Boys, and more. Boyd focuses on past and contemporary illegal drug discourse about users, traffickers, drug treatment, and the intersection of criminal justice with counterculture, alternative, and stoner flicks. She provides a socio-historical and cultural criminological perspective, and an analysis of race, class and gender representations in illegal drug films. This illuminating work will be an essential text for a wide range of students and scholars in the fields of criminology, sociology, media, gender and women’s studies, drug studies, and cultural studies. |
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第 6 到 10 筆結果,共 58 筆
... British subjects used alcohol and indigenous plants for healing. White colonizers from Britain and Europe brought their own remedies to North America, alcohol being one of them. Beer and wine were available on ships in lieu of scarce ...
... British and European settlers to North American also brought with them opiates, derivatives from the opium poppy (Papaver somniferum). It had long been an important medicine in India, China, the Middle East, and Europe, traced to the ...
... British (the East India Company was making huge profits). Opium is a narcotic (as are morphine, heroin, and codeine) that can be consumed by mouth or smoked. Opium is used to relieve pain. It is also used to induce sleep, to ease ...
... Morphine injection to reduce pain became common. Besides its use for pain management, it was also recommended for “hysterical women” and to cure morning sickness in pregnancy. In the 1800s, a number of British novels and autobiographies.
Susan C. Boyd. In the 1800s, a number of British novels and autobiographies refer to the use of laudanum and other opiates. Although all classes of people used opiates, the typical user was a middle- to upper-class White woman. Prior to ...
內容
List of Film Stills | |
Broken Blossoms 36 | |
The Pace that Kills 46 | |
The Man with the Golden Arm 56 | |
CHAPTER 3 | |
The Panic in Needle Park 76 | |
A Nation Under Siege 112 | |
Cleopatra Jones 121 | |
Maria Full of Grace 139 | |
Vilified Women and Maternal Myths 146 | |
1980 to 2006 178 | |
Appendix 209 | 36 |
CHAPTER 6 | 2000 |
References 227 | 2008 |
CHAPTER 4 | |
Gridlockd 101 | |
Reefer Madness 147 | 2026 |
Index 241 | 2029 |