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Golden-Silk Smoke

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From the long-stemmed pipe to snuff, the water pipe, hand-rolled cigarettes, and finally, manufactured cigarettes, the history of tobacco in China is the fascinating story of a commodity that becam...
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  • 10 April 2011
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From the long-stemmed pipe to snuff, the water pipe, hand-rolled cigarettes, and finally, manufactured cigarettes, the history of tobacco in China is the fascinating story of a commodity that became a hallmark of modern mass consumerism. Carol Benedict follows the spread of Chinese tobacco use from the sixteenth century, when it was introduced to China from the New World, through the development of commercialized tobacco cultivation, and to the present day. Along the way, she analyzes the factors that have shaped China’s highly gendered tobacco cultures, and shows how they have evolved within a broad, comparative world-historical framework. Drawing from a wealth of historical sources—gazetteers, literati jottings (biji), Chinese materia medica, Qing poetry, modern short stories, late Qing and early Republican newspapers, travel memoirs, social surveys, advertisements, and more—Golden-Silk Smoke not only uncovers the long and dynamic history of tobacco in China but also sheds new light on global histories of fashion and consumption.
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Price: $85.00
Pages: 352
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 10 April 2011
ISBN: 9780520948563
Format: eBook
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List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. Early Modern Globalization and the Origins of Tobacco in China, 1550–1650
2. The Expansion of Chinese Tobacco Production, Consumption, and Trade, 1600–1750
3. Learning to Smoke Chinese-Style, 1644–1750
4. Tobacco in Ming-Qing Medical Culture
5. The Fashionable Consumption of Tobacco, 1750–1900
6. The Emergence of the Chinese Cigarette Industry, 1880–1937
7. Socially and Spatially Differentiated Tobacco Consumption during the Nanjing Decade, 1927–1937
8. The Urban Cigarette and the Pastoral Pipe: Literary Representations of Smoking in Republican China
9. New Women, Modern Girls, and the Decline of Female Smoking in China, 1900–1976

Epilogue: Tobacco in the People’s Republic of China, 1949–2010

Notes
Works Cited
Index