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Ganja Matters
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30 June 2026

A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press's Open Access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more.
Ganja is the popular name in Hindustani, Bengali, and other South Asian languages for intoxicating substances produced from the plant species Cannabis sativa L. Starting in the eighteenth century, British India's colonial administrators sought ways to systematically tax and govern how ganja circulated from the farms of peasant families in rural Bengal to pipes, plates, and cups elsewhere in the subcontinent. Ganja Matters follows the perpetual incongruity between regulatory efforts to pursue the plant through botanical observation, colonial reportage, and excise statistics and the leisurely, devotional, and creative ganja pursuits among people. Utathya Chattopadhyaya offers a social history of ganja in a multispecies framework that reveals how the cannabis plant co-constituted histories of empire, gender, subalternity, and labor under British rule. Against the weight of the criminalization and "drug-ness" of cannabis, Chattopadhyaya puts the multidirectional and polysemic history of ganja as plant matter at the center of analysis.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Note on Transliteration and Maps
Introduction: The Pursuits of Cannabis
1. A Troubling Subject
2. A Small Peasant Commodity
3. An Excise State
4. An Insurgent Body
5. A Subaltern Deity
6. A Cooperative Experiment
Coda: Ganja and the Nation
Acknowledgments
Glossary of Terms
Notes
Bibliography
Index