David T. Courtwright is Presidential Professor Emeritus at the University of North Florida and the author of Dark Paradise: A History of Opiate Addiction in America and Forces of Habit: Drugs and the Making of the Modern World (both from Harvard). He was an inaugural recipient of a grant from the highly competitive NEH Public Scholar Program and is a regular media commentator on the history of addiction.
[A] compulsively readable book about bad habits becoming big
business…In crisp and playful prose and with plenty of needed
humor, Courtwright has written a fascinating history of what we
like and why we like it, from the first taste of beer in the
ancient Middle East to opioids in West Virginia.
*American Conservative*
A fascinating history of corporate America’s efforts to shape our
habits and desires.
*Vox*
One admires the eclectic sweep of Courtwright’s catalogue of
addictions, his sheer wealth of knowledge…As with all addictions,
the book offers many pleasures and rewards.
*Times Higher Education*
A sweeping, ambitious account of the evolution of addiction…This
bold, thought-provoking synthesis will appeal to fans of ‘big
history’ in the tradition of Guns, Germs, and Steel.
*Publishers Weekly*
An important addition to Courtwright’s groundbreaking work on the
history of substance use disorders, this study of the accelerating
‘weaponization’ of pleasure—and the biological, social, and
economic incentives that fuel excess—is compulsory reading for
anyone wondering how addiction became the foremost public health
problem worldwide. Deeply researched, intensely readable, and a
sobering reminder of our vulnerability to bondage marketed as
liberation.
*Deborah Rudacille, author of The Riddle of Gender*
The delight I took in reading this book can perhaps best be
expressed by saying that I read it end-to-end in two sittings and
might have done it in one if life hadn’t intruded. Courtwright’s
erudition is astonishing, and his wit makes the book fun to read as
well as informative.
*Keith Humphreys, author of Circles of Recovery*
Is limbic capitalism the tail that wags the dog? Is it a vital cog
in a larger and more complex machine? Courtwright offers a powerful
and compelling history of the changing forms of pleasure and
addiction over the long span of human history. A bold and
fascinating book, sure to generate much discussion.
*Daniel Lord Smail, author of On Deep History and the
Brain*
A mind-blowing tour de force that unwraps the myriad objects of
addiction that surround us daily. From alcohol to internet gaming,
food to gambling, drugs to sex, Courtwright covers the globe over
thousands of years. This intelligent, incisive, and sometimes
grimly entertaining book will become the standard work on the
subject.
*Rod Phillips, author of Alcohol: A History*
This rich and rewarding book explores the long history of the
global pleasure revolution. Alcohol, tobacco, drugs, commercialized
food, gambling, and even the internet lean toward addiction, rooted
in pleasure centers in the brain. Courtwright shows how today’s
capitalism supplies those desires at an often frightful price.
*William Rorabaugh, author of Prohibition: A Concise
History*
Compelling and ingenious, this book deals the reader into a reality
game where the crafty biology of pleasure meets what David
Courtwright calls limbic capitalism. No one’s leveling up in the
high-stakes game that is The Age of Addiction. The question is how
you play, whether or not you can stop, and what happens when you
do.
*Nancy D. Campbell, author of Discovering Addiction*
Offers dire warnings about our society…Courtwright has long been
America’s leading voice on the history of drugs, and now he has
shown how, in the world of limbic capitalism, addiction is promoted
as a marketing tool for a wide variety of products, ones that
guarantee customers, often for life.
*EH.net*
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