Opium is a
narcotic formed
from the
latex released by lacerating (or
"scoring") the immature seed pods (
fruits) of
opium poppies (
Papaver somniferum). Opium contains
up to 12%
morphine, an
opiate alkaloid, which is
most frequently processed chemically to produce
heroin for the
illegal
drug trade. The resin also includes
codeine and non-narcotic alkaloids, such as
papaverine,
thebaine and
noscapine.
Meconium
historically referred to related, weaker preparations made from
other parts of the poppy or different species of poppies. Modern
opium production is the culmination of millennia of production, in
which the source poppy, methods of extraction and processing, and
methods of consumption have become increasingly potent.
Cultivation of opium
poppies for
food,
anesthesia, and
ritual purposes dates back to at least the
Neolithic Age. The
Sumerian,
Assyrian,
Egyptian,
Minoan,
Greek,
Roman,
Persian and
Arab Empires each made widespread use of opium,
which was the most potent form of
pain
relief then available, allowing ancient surgeons to perform
prolonged surgical procedures. Opium is mentioned in the most
important
medical texts of the
ancient world, including the
Ebers
Papyrus and the writings of
Dioscorides,
Galen, and
Avicenna. Widespread medical use of
unprocessed opium continued through the
American Civil War before giving way to
morphine and its successors, which could be
injected at a precisely controlled dosage. American morphine is
still produced primarily from poppies grown and processed in India
in the traditional manner and remains the standard of pain relief
for casualties of war.
In China recreational use of the drug began in the fifteenth
century but was limited by its rarity and expense. Opium trade
became more regular by the seventeenth century, when it was mixed
with tobacco for smoking, and addiction was first recognized. Opium
prohibition in China began in 1729 yet was followed by nearly two
centuries of increasing opium use. China had a positive balance
sheet in trading with the British, which led to a decrease of the
British silver stocks. Therefore, the British tried to encourage
Chinese opium use to enhance their balance, and they delivered it
from Indian provinces under British control. A massive confiscation
of opium by the Chinese emperor, who tried to stop the opium
deliveries, led to two
Opium Wars in 1839
and 1858, in which Britain suppressed China and traded opium all
over the country. After 1860, opium use continued to increase with
widespread domestic production in China, until more than a quarter
of the male population was addicted by 1905. Recreational or
addictive opium use in other nations remained rare into the late
nineteenth century, recorded by an ambivalent literature that
sometimes praised the drug.
Global regulation of opium began with the stigmatization of Chinese
immigrants and
opium dens in San
Francisco, leading rapidly from town ordinances in the 1870s to the
formation of the
International Opium
Commission in 1909. During this period, the portrayal of opium
in literature became squalid and violent, British opium trade was
largely supplanted by domestic Chinese production, purified
morphine and
heroin
became widely available for injection, and
patent medicines containing opiates reached
a peak of popularity. Opium was
prohibited in many countries during the
early twentieth century, leading to the modern pattern of opium
production as a precursor for illegal
recreational drugs or tightly regulated
legal prescription drugs. Illicit opium production, now dominated
by
Afghanistan, was decimated
in 2000 when production was banned by the
Taliban, but has increased steadily since the fall
of the Taliban in 2001 and over the course of the
War in Afghanistan. Worldwide production
in 2006 was 6610 metric tonnes - nearly one-fifth the level of
production in 1906. Opium for illegal use is often converted into
heroin, which multiplies its potency to
approximately twice that of morphine, can be taken by
intravenous injection, and is easier
to
smuggle.
History
Ancient use (4200 BC - 800 AD)
At least seventeen finds of
Papaver somniferum from
Neolithic settlements have been reported
throughout Switzerland, Germany, and Spain, including the placement
of large numbers of poppy seed capsules at a burial site (the
Cueva de los Murciélagos, or "Bat cave," in Spain), which
have been carbon-14 dated to 4200 B.C. Numerous finds of
Papaver somniferum or
Papaver setigerum from
Bronze Age and
Iron
Age settlements have also been reported.The first known
cultivation of opium poppies was in
Mesopotamia, approximately 3400 B.C., by
Sumerians who called the plant
Hul
Gil, the "joy plant."
Tablets found at Nippur
, a Sumerian
spiritual center south of Baghdad
, described
the collection of poppy juice in the morning and its use in
production of opium. Cultivation continued in the Middle
East by the
Assyrians, who also
collected poppy juice in the morning after scoring the pods with an
iron scoop; they called the juice
aratpa-pal, possibly the
root of
Papaver. Opium production continued under the
Babylonians and
Egyptians.
Opium was used with
poison hemlock to
put people quickly and painlessly to death, but it was also used in
medicine. The
Ebers Papyrus, ca. 1500
B.C., describes a way to "stop a crying child" using grains of the
poppy-plant strained to a pulp.
Spongia somnifera, sponges soaked in
opium, were used during surgery. The Egyptians cultivated
opium
thebaicum in famous poppy fields around 1300 B.C.
Opium was traded from
Egypt by the Phoenicians
and Minoan to
destinations around the Mediterranean Sea
, including Greece
, Carthage
, and
Europe. By 1100 B.C., opium
was cultivated on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus
, where
surgical-quality knives were used to score the poppy pods, and
opium was cultivated, traded, and smoked. Opium was also
mentioned after the
Persian conquest
of Assyria and Babylonia in the sixth century B.C.
From the earliest finds, opium has appeared to have ritual
significance, and anthropologists have speculated that ancient
priests may have used the drug as a proof of healing power. In
Egypt, the use of opium was generally restricted to priests,
magicians, and warriors, its invention credited to Thoth, and it
was said to have been given by Isis to Ra as treatment for a
headache. A figure of the Minoan "goddess of the narcotics,"
wearing a crown of three opium poppies, ca. 1300 B.C., was
recovered from the Sanctuary of Gazi, Crete, together with a simple
smoking apparatus. The Greek gods
Hypnos
(Sleep),
Nyx (Night), and
Thanatos (Death) were depicted wreathed in poppies
or holding poppies. Poppies also frequently adorned statues of
Apollo,
Asklepios,
Pluto,
Demeter,
Aphrodite,
Kybele and
Isis,
symbolizing nocturnal oblivion.
Islamic Societies (500-1500 A.D.)
As the power of the
Roman Empire
declined, the lands to the south, and east of the Mediterranean sea
became incorporated into the
Islamic
Empire, which assembled the finest libraries and the most
skilled physicians of the era. Many Muslims believe that the
hadith of
al-Bukhari prohibits every intoxicating substance
as
haraam, but the use of intoxicants in
medicine has been widely permitted by Scholars, even though it is
prohibited under Islamic Law.
Dioscorides' five-volume
De Materia Medica, the precursor of
pharmacopoeias, remained in use (with
some improvements in Arabic versions) from the 1st to 16th
centuries and described opium, meconium and the wide range of uses
prevalent in the ancient world.Somewhere between 400 and 1200 AD,
Arab traders introduced opium to China.
The Persian physician
Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi
Rhazes (845-930 A.D.) maintained a laboratory
and school in Baghdad
, and was a
student and critic of Galen, made use of opium
in anesthesia and recommended its use for the treatment of
melancholy in Fi ma-yahdara al-tabib (In the Absence of a
Physician) , a home medical manual directed toward ordinary
citizens for self-treatment if a doctor was not available.
The renowned
ophthalmologic surgeon
Abu al-Qasim Ammar (936-1013 AD) relied
on opium and
mandrake as surgical
anaesthetics and wrote a treatise,
al-Tasrif, that influenced medical thought
well into the sixteenth century. The Persian physician
Abū ‘Alī al-Husayn ibn Sina (Avicenna) described
opium as the most powerful of the stupefacients, by comparison with
mandrake and other highly effective
herbs, in
The Canon of
Medicine. This classic text was translated into Latin in
1175 and later into many other languages and remained authoritative
into the seventeenth century.
Şerafeddin Sabuncuoğlu used
opium in the fourteenth century Ottoman Empire to treat
migraine headaches,
sciatica, and other painful ailments.
Reintroduction to Western medicine
Opium became stigmatized in Europe during the
Inquisition as a Middle Eastern influence and
became a taboo subject in Europe from approximately 1300 to 1500
A.D. Manuscripts of
Pseudo-Apuleius's fifth-century work from
the tenth and eleventh centuries refer to the use of wild poppy
Papaver agreste or
Papaver rhoeas (identified
as
Papaver silvaticum) instead of
Papaver somniferum for inducing
sleep and relieving pain.
The use of
Paracelsus'
laudanum was introduced to Western medicine in
1527, when Philip Aureolus Theophrastus Bombast von Hohenheim,
better known by the name Paracelsus, returned from his wanderings
in Arabia with a famous sword, within the pommel of which he kept
"Stones of Immortality" compounded from opium thebaicum, citrus
juice, and "quintessence of gold." The name "Paracelsus" was a
pseudonym signifying him the equal or better of
Aulus Cornelius Celsus, whose text,
which described the use of opium or a similar preparation, had
recently been translated and reintroduced to medieval Europe.
The
Canon of Medicine, the standard medical textbook that
Paracelsus burned in a public bonfire three weeks after being
appointed professor at the University of Basel
, also described the use of opium, though many Latin
translations were of poor quality. Laudanum was
originally the sixteenth-century term for a medicine associated
with a particular physician that was widely well-regarded, but
became standardized as "
tincture of opium,"
a solution of opium in
ethyl alcohol, which
Paracelsus has been credited with developing. During his lifetime,
Paracelsus was viewed as an adventurer who challenged the theories
and mercenary motives of contemporary medicine with dangerous
chemical therapies, but his therapies marked a turning point in
Western medicine. In the seventeenth century laudanum was
recommended for pain, sleeplessness, and diarrhea by
Thomas Sydenham, the renowned "father of
English medicine" or "English Hippocrates," to whom is attributed
the quote, "Among the remedies which it has pleased Almighty God to
give to man to relieve his sufferings, none is so universal and so
efficacious as opium." Use of opium as a cure-all was reflected in
the formulation of
mithridatium
described in the 1728
Chambers
Cyclopedia, which included true opium in the mixture.
Subsequently, laudanum became the basis of many popular
patent medicines of the nineteenth
century.
The standard medical use of opium persisted well into the
nineteenth century. U.S. president
William Henry Harrison was treated
with opium in 1841, and in the
American Civil War, the Union Army used
2.8 million
ounces of opium tincture and
powder and about 500,000 opium pills. During this time of
popularity, users called opium "God's Own Medicine."
The most important reason for the increase in opiate consumption in
the United States during the 19th century was the prescribing and
dispensing of legal opiates by physicians and pharmacist to women
with ”female problems” (mostly to relieve painful menstruation.
Between 150,000 and 200,000 opiate addicts lived in the United
States in the late 19th century and between two-thirds and
three-quarters of these addicts were women.
Recreational use in Islamic Societies
.jpg/180px-The_Opium_Seller_(W._M%C3%BCller).jpg)
An imaginary view of an Ottoman opium
seller
In Islamic societies, opium is said to have been used for
recreational purposes from the 14th century onwards. Testimonies of
historians, diplomats, religious scholars, intellectuals and
travellers, Ottoman and European, confirm that, from the 16th to
the 19th century, Anatolian opium was eaten in Constantinople as
much as it was exported to Europe. From eating it, dervishes drew
ecstasy, soldiers courage, dignitaries and people bliss and
voluptuousness. It is not only to the pleasures of coffee and
tulips that the Ottomans initiated Europe. It was also Turkey
which, long before China, supplied the West with opium. According
to Fynes Moryson, who travelled in Turkey in 1595–7, “The Turkish
Souldiers being to fight, if they can find no wine, drinke the
juyce of blacke poppy, called Opium, to raise their spirits to a
kind of fury, thinking themselves made more valiant thereby; For
howsoever we thinke this hearbe, especially taken largely, to be
dangerous for the health, yet there is not a Turke from the highest
to the lowest, who doth not as it were daily use it, nothing being
more frequently sowed, nothing more plentifully growing, especially
in Natolia, nothing more easily finding a buyer; yea, if their
Cammels and Dromidaries faile by the way, or upon necessity must
goe further than they use to journey, as sometimes it fals out in
Armies and other Journeys, then they give them this hearbe, by
which they report their spirits so to be stirred up, as they will
goe till they fall downe dead.”In his “Confessions of an English
Opium-eater” (1821, p. 188), it is still about Ottoman, not
Chinese, addicts that Thomas de Quincey writes: “I question whether
any Turk, of all that ever entered the paradise of opium-eaters,
can have had half the pleasure I had".
Extensive textual and pictural sources also show that poppy
cultivation and opium consumption were widespread in Safavid Iran
and Moghol India.
Recreational use in China
The earliest clear description of the use of opium as a
recreational drug in China came from
Xu Boling, who wrote in 1483 that opium
was "mainly used to aid masculinity, strengthen sperm and regain
vigor," and that it "enhances the art of alchemists, sex and
courtladies."
He described an expedition sent by the
Chenghua Emperor in 1483 to procure
opium for a price "equal to that of gold" in Hainan
, Fujian
, Zhejiang
, Sichuan
and Shaanxi
where it is
close to Xiyu. A century later,
Li Shizhen listed standard medical uses of opium
in his renowned
Compendium of Materia
Medica (1578), but also wrote that "lay people use it for
the art of sex," in particular the ability to "arrest seminal
emission." This association of opium with sex continued in China
until the twentieth century. Opium smoking began as a privilege of
the elite and remained a great luxury into the early nineteenth
century, but by 1861,
Wang Tao wrote that
opium was used even by rich peasants, and even a small village
without a rice store would have a shop where opium was sold.
Smoking of
opium came on the heels of tobacco smoking and may have been
encouraged by a brief ban on the smoking of tobacco by the Ming
emperor,
ending in 1644 with the Qing
dynasty,
which had encouraged smokers to mix in increasing amounts of
opium. In 1705,
Wang Shizhen
wrote that "nowadays, from nobility and gentlemen down to slaves
and women, all are addicted to tobacco." Tobacco in that time was
frequently mixed with other herbs (this continues with
clove cigarettes to the modern day), and
opium was one component in the mixture.
Tobacco mixed with
opium was called madak (or madat) and became
popular throughout China and its seafaring trade partners (such as
Taiwan
, Java
and the
Philippines
) in the seventeenth century. In 1712, Engelbert Kaempfer described addiction to madak: "No
commodity throughout the Indies is
retailed with greater profit by the Batavians
than opium, which [its] users cannot do without,
nor can they come by it except it be brought by the ships of the
Batavians from Bengal
and Coromandel."
Fueled in part by the 1729 ban on
madak, which
at first effectively exempted pure opium as a potentially medicinal
product, the smoking of pure opium became more popular in the
eighteenth century. In 1736, the smoking of pure opium was
described by
Huang Shujing, involving
a pipe made from bamboo rimmed with silver, stuffed with palm
slices and hair, fed by a clay bowl in which a globule of molten
opium was held over the flame of an oil lamp. This elaborate
procedure, requiring the maintenance of pots of opium at just the
right temperature for a globule to be scooped up with a needle-like
skewer for smoking, formed the basis of a craft of "paste-scooping"
by which servant girls could become prostitutes as the opportunity
arose.
Beginning in 19th-century China, famine and political upheaval, as
well as rumors of wealth to be had in nearby
Southeast Asia, led to the
Chinese Diaspora. Chinese emigrants to
cities such as San Francisco, London, and New York brought with
them the Chinese manner of opium smoking and the social traditions
of the
opium den. The
Indian Diaspora distributed opium-eaters in
the same way, and both social groups survived as "
lascars" (seamen) and "
coolies"
(manual laborers). French sailors provided another major group of
opium smokers, having contracted the habit in
French Indochina, where the drug was
promoted by the colonial government as a monopoly and source of
revenue. Among white Europeans, opium was more frequently consumed
as
laudanum or in
patent medicines. Britain's All-India Opium
Act of 1878 formalized social distinctions, limiting recreational
opium sales to registered Indian opium-eaters and Chinese
opium-smokers and prohibiting its sale to workers from Burma.
Likewise, American law sought to contain addiction to immigrants by
prohibiting Chinese from smoking opium in the presence of a white
man.
Because of the low social status of immigrant workers, contemporary
writers and media had little trouble portraying opium dens as seats
of vice,
white slavery,
gambling, knife and revolver fights, a source for drugs causing
deadly overdoses, with the potential to addict and corrupt the
white population.
By 1919, anti-Chinese riots attacked
Limehouse
, the Chinatown of London
.
Chinese men were deported for playing
puck-apu, a popular gambling game, and sentenced to
hard labor for opium possession. Both the immigrant population and
the social use of opium fell into decline. Yet despite lurid
literary accounts to the contrary, nineteenth-century London was
not a hotbed of opium smoking.
The total lack of photographic evidence of
opium smoking in Britain, as opposed to the relative abundance of
historical photos depicting opium smoking in North America and
France, indicates that the infamous Limehouse
opium smoking scene was little more than fantasy on
the part of British writers of the day who were intent on
scandalizing their readers while drumming up the threat of the
"yellow peril."
Prohibition and conflict in China
Opium
prohibition began in 1729, when Emperor Yongzheng of the Qing Dynasty
, disturbed by madak smoking at
court and carrying out the government's role of upholding Confucian virtue, officially prohibited the sale
of opium, except for a small amount for medicinal purposes.
The ban punished sellers and
opium den
keepers, but not users of the drug. Opium was banned completely in
1799 and this prohibition continued until 1860.

English opium ships
Under the
Qing
Dynasty
, China opened itself to foreign trade under the
Canton System through the port of
Guangzhou
(Canton), and traders from the British East India Company began
visiting the port by the 1690s. Due to the growing
British demand for Indian
tea and the Chinese lack of interest in British
commodities other than silver, the British became interested in
opium as a high-value commodity for which China was not
self-sufficient. The British traders had been purchasing
small amounts of opium from India for trade since
Ralph Fitch first visited in the mid-sixteenth
century. Trade in opium was standardized, with production of balls
of raw opium, 1.1 to 1.6 kilograms, 30% water content, wrapped in
poppy leaves and petals, and shipped in chests of 60-65 kilograms
(one
picul).
Chests of opium were sold in auctions in
Calcutta
with the understanding that the independent
purchasers would then smuggle it into China (see Opium Wars).
After the
1757 Battle of Plassey and 1764
Battle of Buxar, the British East India Company gained
the power to act as diwan of Bengal
, Bihar
, and
Orissa
(See
company rule in
India). This allowed the company to pursue a
monopoly on opium production and export in
India, to encourage
ryots to cultivate the cash
crops of
indigo and opium with cash advances,
and to prohibit the "hoarding" of rice. This strategy led to the
increase of the land tax to 50% of the value of crops, the
starvation of ten million people in the
Bengal famine of 1770, and the
doubling of East India Company profits by 1777. Beginning in 1773,
the British government began enacting oversight of the company's
operations, culminating in the establishment of
British India in response to the
Indian Rebellion of 1857. Bengal
opium was highly prized, commanding twice the price of the domestic
Chinese product, which was regarded as inferior in quality. The
Sassoon family was heavily involved
in the opium trade in both China and India.
India is also an opium producing nation. In India, Nimach, Mandsour
(Madhya Pradesh), and Chittorgarh (Rajasthan) are major centers for
opium production because these areas are suitable for the opium
crop i.e. climate, soil. It is the major crop of this region.
Nimach has a opium & alkaloid factory which is the organisation
of Govt. of India producing alkaloids from opium for pharmaceutical
medicine.
Some
competition came from the newly independent United States, which
began to compete in Guangzhou
(Canton) selling Turkish opium in the
1820s. Portuguese traders also brought opium from the
independent Malwa states of western India, although by 1820, the
British were able to restrict this trade by charging "pass duty" on
the opium when it was forced to pass through Bombay to reach an
entrepot.Despite drastic penalties and
continued prohibition of opium until 1860, opium importation rose
steadily from 200 chests per year under
Yongzheng to 1,000 under
Qianlong, 4,000 under
Jiaqing, and 30,000 under
Daoguang. The illegal sale of opium became one of
the world's most valuable single commodity trades and has been
called "the most long continued and systematic international crime
of modern times."
In
response to the ever-growing number of Chinese people becoming
addicted to opium, Daoguang of the Qing Dynasty
took strong action to halt the import of opium,
including the seizure of cargo. In 1838, the Chinese
Commissioner Lin Zexu destroyed 20,000
chests of opium in Guangzhou
(Canton). Given that a chest of
opium was worth nearly $1,000 in 1800, this was a substantial
economic loss.
The British, not willing to replace the
cheap opium with costly silver, began the First Opium War in 1840, winning Hong Kong
and trade concessions in the first of a series of
Unequal Treaties.

Map showing the amount of Opium
produced in China in 1908
Following China's defeat in the
Second
Opium War in 1858, China was forced to legalize opium and began
massive domestic production. Importation of opium peaked in 1879 at
6,700 tons, and by 1906, China was producing 85% of the world's
opium, some 35,000 tons, and 27% of its adult male population was
addicted—13.5 million addicts consuming 39,000 tons of opium
yearly. From 1880 to the beginning of the Communist era, the
British attempted to discourage the use of opium in China, but this
effectively promoted the use of morphine, heroin, and cocaine,
further exacerbating the problem of addiction.
Scientific evidence of the pernicious nature of opium use was
largely undocumented in the 1890s when
Protestant missionaries in China decided to
strengthen their opposition to the trade by compiling data which
would demonstrate the harm the drug did. Faced with the problem
that many Chinese associated Christianity with opium, partly due to
the arrival of early Protestant missionaries on opium clippers, at
the 1890 Shanghai Missionary Conference, they agreed to establish
the Permanent Committee for the Promotion of Anti-Opium Societies
in an attempt to overcome this problem and to arouse public opinion
against the opium trade. The members of the committee were
John Glasgow Kerr, MD, American
Presbyterian Mission in Canton; B.C. Atterbury, MD, American
Presbyterian Mission in Peking; Archdeacon
Arthur E. Moule, Church Missionary Society in
Shanghai; Henry Whitney, MD, American Board of Commissioners for
foreign Missions in Foochow; the Rev. Samuel Clarke, China Inland
Mission in Kweiyang; the Rev.
Arthur Gostick Shorrock, English
Baptist Mission in Taiyuan; and the Rev.
Griffith John, London Mission Society in
Hankow. These missionaries were generally outraged over the British
government's
Royal Commission
on Opium visiting India but not China. Accordingly, the
missionaries first organized the
Anti-Opium League in China among
their colleagues in every mission station in China. American
missionary
Hampden Coit DuBose
acted as first president. This organization, which had elected
national officers and held an annual national meeting, was
instrumental in gathering data from every Western-trained medical
doctor in China, which was then published as
William Hector Park compiled
Opinions of Over 100 Physicians on the Use of Opium in
China (Shanghai: American Presbyterian Mission Press, 1899).
The vast majority of these medical doctors were missionaries; the
survey also included doctors who were in private practices,
particularly in Shanghai and Hong Kong, as well as Chinese who had
been trained in medical schools in Western countries. In England,
the home director of the
China
Inland Mission,
Benjamin
Broomhall, was an active opponent of the Opium trade, writing
two books to promote the banning of opium smoking:
The Truth
about Opium Smoking and
The Chinese Opium Smoker. In
1888, Broomhall formed and became secretary of the Christian Union
for the Severance of the British Empire with the Opium Traffic and
editor of its periodical,
National Righteousness.
He
lobbied the British
Parliament
to stop the opium trade. He and
James Laidlaw Maxwell appealed to the
London Missionary Conference of 1888 and the Edinburgh Missionary
Conference of 1910 to condemn the continuation of the trade. When
Broomhall was dying, his son Marshall read to him from
The Times the welcome news that an agreement
had been signed ensuring the end of the opium trade within two
years.
Official Chinese resistance to opium was renewed on September 20,
1906, with an anti-opium initiative intended to eliminate the drug
problem within ten years. The program relied on the turning of
public sentiment against opium, with mass meetings at which
opium paraphernalia was publicly
burned, as well as coercive legal action and the granting of police
powers to organizations such as the Fujian Anti-Opium Society.
Smokers were required to register for licenses for gradually
reducing rations of the drug. Addicts sometimes turned to
missionaries for treatment for their addiction, though many
associated these foreigners with the drug trade. The program was
counted as a substantial success, with a cessation of direct
British opium exports to China (but not Hong Kong) and most
provinces declared free of opium production. Nonetheless, the
success of the program was only temporary, with opium use rapidly
increasing during the disorder following the death of
Yuan Shikai in 1916.
Beginning in 1915, Chinese nationalist groups came to describe the
period of military losses and
Unequal
Treaties as the "Century of National Humiliation," later
defined to end with the conclusion of the
Chinese Civil War in 1949. The
Mao Zedong government is generally credited with
eradicating both consumption and production of opium during the
1950s using unrestrained repression and social reform. Ten million
addicts were forced into compulsory treatment, dealers were
executed, and opium-producing regions were planted with new crops.
Remaining
opium production shifted south of the Chinese border into the
Golden
Triangle
region, at times with the involvement of Western
intelligence agencies. The remnant opium trade primarily
served Southeast Asia, but spread to American soldiers during the
Vietnam War, with 20% of soldiers
regarding themselves as addicted during the peak of the epidemic in
1971. In 2003, China was estimated to have four million regular
drug users and one million registered drug addicts.
Prohibition outside China
There
were no legal restrictions on the importation or use of opium in
the United States until the San Francisco
, California
, Opium Den Ordinance, which banned dens for public
smoking of opium in 1875, a measure fueled by anti-Chinese
sentiment and the perception that whites were starting to frequent
the dens. This was followed by an 1891 California law
requiring that narcotics carry warning labels and that their sales
be recorded in a registry, amendments to the California Pharmacy
and Poison Act in 1907 making it a crime to sell opiates without a
prescription, and bans on possession of opium or opium pipes in
1909.
At the US federal level, the legal actions taken reflected
constitutional restrictions under the
Enumerated powers doctrine prior to
reinterpretation of the
Commerce
clause, which did not allow the federal government to enact
arbitrary prohibitions but did permit arbitrary taxation. Beginning
in 1883, opium importation was taxed at $6 to $300 per pound, until
the Opium Exclusion Act of 1909 prohibited the importation of opium
altogether. In a similar manner the
Harrison Narcotics Tax Act of
1914, passed in fulfillment of the
International Opium
Convention of 1912, nominally placed a tax on the distribution
of opiates, but served as a
de facto prohibition of the
drugs. Today, opium is regulated by the
Drug Enforcement
Administration under the
Controlled Substances Act.
Following passage of a regional law in 1895, Australia's
Aboriginal Protection and restriction of the sale of opium act
1897 addressed opium addiction among
Aborigines, though it soon became a
general vehicle for depriving them of basic rights by
administrative regulation. Opium sale was prohibited to the general
population in 1905, and smoking and possession was prohibited in
1908.
Hardening of Canadian attitudes toward Chinese opium users and fear
of a spread of the drug into the white population led to the
effective criminalization of opium for non-medical use in Canada
between 1908 and the mid-1920s.
In 1909, the
International Opium
Commission was founded, and by 1914, thirty-four nations had
agreed that the production and importation of opium should be
diminished. In 1924, sixty-two nations participated in a meeting of
the Commission. Subsequently, this role passed to the
League of Nations, and all signatory
nations agreed to prohibit the import, sale, distribution, export,
and use of all narcotic drugs, except for medical and scientific
purposes. This role was later taken up by the
International Narcotics
Control Board of the
United
Nations under
Article 23 of the
Single Convention on
Narcotic Drugs, and subsequently under the
Convention on Psychotropic
Substances. Opium-producing nations are required to designate a
government agency to take physical
possession of licit opium crops as soon as possible after harvest
and conduct all wholesaling and exporting through that
agency.
Obsolescence
Opium has gradually been superseded by a variety of purified,
semi-synthetic, and synthetic
opioids with
progressively stronger effect, and by other
general anesthetics. This process began
in 1804, when
Friedrich Wilhelm
Adam Sertürner first isolated morphine from the opium poppy.
The process continued until 1817, when Sertürner published the
isolation of pure
morphine from opium after
at least thirteen years of research and a nearly disastrous trial
on himself and three boys. The great advantage of purified morphine
was that a patient could be treated with a known dose—whereas with
raw plant material, as
Gabriel
Fallopius once lamented, "if soporifics are weak they do not
help; if they are strong they are exceedingly dangerous." Morphine
was the first pharmaceutical isolated from a natural product, and
this success encouraged the isolation of other alkaloids: by 1820,
isolations of
narcotine,
strychnine,
veratrine,
colchicine,
caffeine, and
quinine were
reported. Morphine sales began in 1827, by
Heinrich Emanuel Merck of Darmstadt,
and helped him expand his family pharmacy into the massive
Merck KGaA pharmaceutical company.
Codeine was isolated in 1832 by
Robiquet.
The use of
diethyl ether and
chloroform for
general anesthesia began in 1846-1847,
and rapidly displaced the use of opiates and
tropane alkaloids from
Solanaceae due to their relative safety.
Heroin, the first semi-synthetic opiate, was first
synthesized in 1874, but was not pursued until its rediscovery in
1897 by Felix Hoffmann at the
Bayer pharmaceutical company in Elberfeld
, Germany
. From 1898 to 1910 heroin was marketed as a
non-addictive morphine substitute and cough medicine for children.
By 1902, sales made up 5% of the company's profits, and "heroinism"
had attracted media attention.
Oxycodone,
a
thebaine derivative similar to
codeine, was introduced by Bayer in 1916 and
promoted as a less-addictive analgesic. Preparations of the drug
such as
Percocet and
OxyContin remain popular to this day.
A range of synthetic
opioids such as
methadone (1937),
pethidine (1939),
fentanyl
(late 1950s), and derivatives thereof have been introduced, and
each is preferred for certain specialized applications.
Nonetheless, morphine remains the drug of choice for American
combat medics, who carry packs of
syrettes containing 16 milligrams each for
use on severely wounded soldiers. No drug has yet been found that
can match the painkilling effect of
opioids
without also duplicating much of its addictive potential.
Modern production and usage
Papaver somniferum

Raw opium
In South American countries, opium poppies (
Papaver
somniferum) are technically illegal, but nonetheless appear in
some nurseries as ornamentals. They are popular and attractive
garden plants, whose flowers vary greatly in color, size and form.
A modest amount of domestic cultivation in private gardens is not
usually subject to legal controls. In part, this tolerance reflects
variation in addictive potency: a cultivar for opium production,
Papaver somniferum L. elite, contains 92% morphine,
codeine, and thebaine in its latex alkaloids, whereas the condiment
cultivar "Marianne" has only one-fifth this total, with the
remaining alkaloids made up mostly of
narcotoline and
noscapine.
Seed capsules can be dried and used for decorations, but they also
contain morphine, codeine, and other alkaloids. These pods can be
boiled in water to produce a bitter tea that induces a long-lasting
intoxication
(See Poppy tea). If
allowed to mature, poppy pods can be crushed into "poppy straw" and
used to produce lower quantities of
morphinans. In poppies subjected to mutagenesis
and selection on a mass scale, researchers have been able to use
poppy straw to obtain large quantities of
oripavine, a precursor to
opioids and antagonists such as
naltrexone.
Poppyseeds are a common and flavorsome
topping for breads and cakes. One gram of poppy seeds contains up
to 33 micrograms of morphine and 14 micrograms of codeine, and the
Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration formerly
mandated that all drug screening laboratories use a standard cutoff
of 300 nanograms per milliliter in urine samples. A single poppy
seed roll (0.76 grams of seeds) usually did not produce a positive
drug test, but a positive result was
observed from eating two rolls. A slice of poppy seed cake
containing nearly five grams of seeds per slice produced positive
results for 24 hours. Such results are viewed as
false positive indications of drug abuse and
were the basis of a legal defense. On November 30, 1998, the
standard cutoff was increased to 2000 nanograms (two micrograms)
per milliliter. During the Communist era in Eastern Europe, poppy
stalks sold in bundles by farmers were processed by users with
household chemicals to make
kompot ("
Polish heroin"), and poppy seeds were used to
produce
koknar, an opiate.
Harvesting and processing
When grown for opium production, the skin of the ripening pods of
these poppies is scored by a sharp blade at a time carefully chosen
so that neither rain, wind, nor dew can spoil the exudation of
white, milky
latex, usually in the afternoon.
Incisions are made while the pods are still raw, with no more than
a slight yellow tint, and must be shallow to avoid penetrating
hollow inner chambers or
loculi while cutting into the
lactiferous vessels. In Indian Subcontinent, Afghanistan, Central
Asia and Iran, the special tool used to make the incisions is
called a
nushtar or "nishtar" (from
Persian, meaning a lancet) and carries
three or four blades three millimeters apart, which are scored
upward along the pod. Incisions are made three or four times at
intervals of two to three days, and each time the "poppy tears,"
which dry to a sticky brown resin, are collected the following
morning. One
acre harvested in this way can
produce three to five kilograms of raw opium.
In the Soviet Union
, pods were typically scored horizontally, and opium
was collected three times, or else one or two collections were
followed by isolation of opiates from the ripe capsules. Oil
poppies, an alternative strain of
P. somniferum, were also
used for production of opiates from their capsules and stems.

Black tar opium seized in Afghanistan,
spring 2005
Raw opium may be sold to a merchant or broker on the black market,
but it usually does not travel far from the field before it is
refined into
morphine base, because pungent,
jelly-like raw opium is bulkier and harder to smuggle. Crude
laboratories in the field are capable of refining opium into
morphine base by a simple
acid-base
extraction. A sticky, brown paste, morphine base is pressed
into bricks and sun-dried, and can either be smoked, prepared into
other forms or processed into
heroin.
The production of wheat that is being produced in Deh Dehi has
decreased dramatically since farmers had invested into the opium
trade. Over some years, the opium trade has become the key economic
activities in the village. A farmer reported that he can earn
between 1000-2000 lakhs annual profit from poppy cultivation
instead of the 20 he would make cultivating wheat. Now, all the
irrigated land is given over to the poppy cultivation, and most of
the men and women who worked in the livestock trade are either
involved in the opium trade or worker overseas.
Other methods of preparation (besides smoking), include processing
into regular opium
tincture (
tinctura
opii),
laudanum,
paregoric (
tinctura opii camphorata),
herbal wine (eg
vinum opii),
opium powder (
pulvis opii), opium
sirup (
sirupus opii) and opium extract
(
extractum opii). Vinum opii is made by combining
sugar,
white wine,
cinnamon, and
cloves. Opium
syrup is made by combining 997.5 part sugar syrup with 2.5 parts
opium extract. Opium extract (
extractum opii) finally can
be made by macerating raw opium with water. To make opium extract,
20 parts water are combined with 1 part raw opium which has been
boiled for 5 minutes (the latter to ease mixing).
Heroin is widely preferred because of
increased potency. One study in postaddicts found heroin to be
approximately 2.2 times more potent than
morphine by weight with a similar duration; at
these relative quantities, they could distinguish the drugs
subjectively but had no preference. Heroin was also found to be
twice as potent as morphine in surgical anesthesia. Morphine is
converted into heroin by a simple chemical reaction with
acetic anhydride, followed by a varying
degree of purification. Especially in Mexican production, opium may
be converted directly to "
black tar
heroin" in a simplified procedure. This form predominates in
the U.S. west of the Mississippi. Relative to other preparations of
heroin, it has been associated with a dramatically decreased rate
of
HIV transmission among
intravenous drug users (4% in Los
Angeles vs. 40% in New York) due to technical requirements of
injection, although it is also associated with greater risk of
venous
sclerosis and
necrotizing fasciitis.
Illegal production

Approximate global opium production
for recreational purposes

International drug routes
Opium production has fallen greatly since 1906, when 41,000 tons
were produced, but because 39,000 tons of that year's opium were
consumed in China, overall usage in the rest of the world was much
lower. In 1980, 2,000 tons of opium supplied all legal and illegal
uses. Recently, opium production has increased considerably,
surpassing 5,000 tons in 2002. In 2002, the price for one kilogram
of opium was $300 for the farmer, $800 for purchasers in
Afghanistan, and $16,000 on the streets of Europe before conversion
into heroin.
Following documented trends of increasing availability mirroring
increased American military and geo-political regional involvement,
Afghanistan is currently the primary producer of the drug. After
regularly producing 70% of the world's opium, Afghanistan decreased
production to 74 tons per year under a ban by the
Taliban in 2000, a move which cut production by 94
per cent. A year later, after American and British troops invaded
Afghanistan, removed the Taliban and installed the interim
government, the land under cultivation leapt back to 285 square
miles, with Afghanistan supplanting Burma to become the world's
largest opium producer once more. Opium production in that country
has increased rapidly since, reaching an all-time high in 2006.
According to
DEA
statistics, Afghanistan's production of oven-dried opium increased
to 1,278 tons in 2002, more than doubled by 2003, and nearly
doubled again during 2004. In late 2004, the U.S. government
estimated that 206,000
hectares were under
poppy cultivation, 4.5% of the country's total cropland, and
produced 4,200 metric tons of opium, 76% of the world's supply,
yielding 60% of Afghanistan's
gross domestic product.
In 2006, the UN Office on
Drugs and Crime
estimated production to have risen 59% to in
cultivation, yielding 6,100 tons of opium, 82% of the world's
supply. The value of the resulting heroin was estimated at
$3.5 billion, of which Afghan farmers were estimated to have
received $700 million in revenue (of which the Taliban have been
estimated to have collected anywhere from tens of millions to $140
million in taxes). For farmers, the crop can be up to ten times
more profitable than wheat. The price of opium is around $138 per
kilo (
INR7,000 per kg). However, opium
production has led to rising tensions in Afghan villages. Though
direct conflict has yet to occur, the opinions of the new class of
young, rich men involved in the opium trade are at odds with those
of the traditional village leaders.
An increasingly large fraction of opium is processed into morphine
base and heroin in drug labs in Afghanistan. Despite an
international set of chemical controls designed to restrict
availability of
acetic anhydride,
it enters the country, perhaps through its Central Asian neighbors
which do not participate. A counternarcotics law passed in December
2005 requires Afghanistan to develop registries or regulations for
tracking, storing, and owning acetic anhydride.
Besides
Afghanistan, smaller quantities of opium are produced in Pakistan,
the Golden Triangle
region of Southeast
Asia (particularly Myanmar
), Colombia
and Mexico
.

200 g Spanish opium ball
Chinese production mainly trades and profits off of North America.
In 2002, they were seeking to expand through eastern United States.
Due to post 9/11 era, trading between borders became difficult and
because new international laws were set into place, opium trade
became more diffused. Power shifted from remote to high-end
smugglers and opuim traders. Outsourcing became a huge factor for
survival for many smugglers and opium farmers.
Legal production
Legal opium production is allowed under the
United
Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs and other
international drug treaties, subject to strict supervision by the
law enforcement agencies of
individual countries. The leading legal production method is the
Gregory process, whereby the entire poppy, excluding roots and
leaves, is mashed and stewed in dilute acid solutions. The
alkaloids are then recovered via
acid-base extraction and purified. This
process was developed in the UK during
World War II, when wartime shortages of many
essential drugs encouraged
innovation in
pharmaceutical
processing.
Legal opium production
in India is much more traditional. As of 2008, opium was
collected by farmers who were licensed to grow 0.1 hectare of opium
poppies (0.24 acre), who to maintain their licenses needed to sell
56 kilograms of unadulterated raw opium paste. The price of opium
paste is fixed by the government according to the quality and
quantity tendered. The average is around 1500 rupees ($29 US) per
kilogram. Some additional money is made by drying the poppy heads
and collecting poppy seeds, and a small fraction of opium beyond
the quota may be consumed locally or diverted to the black market.
The opium paste is dried and processed in two government opium and
alkaloid factories before it is packed into cases of 60 kilograms
for export. Purification of chemical constituents is done in India
for domestic production, but typically done abroad by foreign
importers.
Legal
opium importation from India and Turkey
is
conducted by Mallinckrodt, Noramco, Abbott
Laboratories, and Purdue Pharma in
the United States, and legal opium production is conducted by
GlaxoSmithKline, Johnson and
Johnson
, Johnson Matthey,
and Mayne in Tasmania
, Australia; Sanofi Aventis in France; Shionogi Pharmaceutical in Japan; and MacFarlan Smith in the United
Kingdom. The
United
NationsUN treaty requires that every country submit annual
reports to the
International Narcotics
Control Board, stating that year's actual consumption of many
classes of controlled drugs as well as opioids and projecting
required quantities for the next year. This is to allow trends in
consumption to be monitored and production quotas allotted.
A recent proposal from the European
Senlis Council hopes to solve the problems
caused by the massive quantity of
opium produced illegally in
Afghanistan, most of which is converted to heroin and smuggled
for sale in Europe and the USA. This proposal is to
license Afghan farmers to produce opium for
the world pharmaceutical market, and thereby solve another problem,
that of chronic underuse of potent analgesics where required within
developing nations.
Part of the proposal
is to overcome the "80-20 rule" that requires the U.S. to purchase
80% of its legal opium from India
and Turkey
to include
Afghanistan, by establishing a second-tier system of supply control
that complements the current INCB regulated supply and demand
system by providing poppy-based medicines to countries who cannot
meet their demand under the current regulations.
Senlis
arranged a conference in Kabul that brought drug policy experts
from around the world to meet with Afghan government officials to
discuss internal security, corruption issues, and legal issues
within Afghanistan
.In June 2007, the Council launched a "Poppy
for Medicines" project that provides a technical blueprint for the
implementation of an integrated control system within Afghan
village-based poppy for medicine projects: the idea promotes the
economic diversification by redirecting proceeds from the legal
cultivation of poppy and production of poppy-based medicines (See
Senlis Council). However, there has
been criticism of the Senlis report findings by Macfarlan Smith,
who argue that though they produce morphine in Europe, they were
never asked to contribute to the report.
Cultivation in the UK
In late
2006, the British
government permitted the pharmaceutical company
Macfarlan Smith (a Johnson Matthey company) to cultivate opium
poppies in England
for medicinal reasons, after Macfarlan Smith's
primary source, India, decided to increase the price of export
opium latex. This move is well received by British
farmers, with a major opium poppy field based in Didcot
, England
. The British government has contradicted the
Home Office's suggestion that opium cultivation can be legalized in
Afghanistan
for exports to the United Kingdom, helping lower
poverty and internal fighting whilst helping NHS to meet the high demand for
morphine and heroin. Opium poppy cultivation in the United
Kingdom does not need a licence; however, a licence is required for
those wishing to extract opium for
medicinal products.
Consumption
In the
industrialized world, the USA
is the
world's biggest consumer of prescription opioids, with Italy
one of the
lowest. Most opium imported into the United States is broken
down into its
alkaloid constituents, and
whether legal or illegal, most current drug use occurs with
processed derivatives such as
heroin rather
than with pure and untouched opium.
Intravenous injection of
opiates is most used: by comparison with injection, "dragon
chasing" (heating of heroin with
barbital
on a piece of foil), and
madak and "ack ack"
(smoking of
cigarettes containing
tobacco mixed with heroin powder) are only
40% and 20% efficient, respectively. One study of British heroin
addicts found a 12-fold excess mortality ratio (1.8% of the group
dying per year). Most heroin deaths result not from overdose
per se, but combination with other depressant drugs such
as
alcohol or
benzodiazepines.
The smoking of opium does not involve the
pyrolysis of the material as might be imagined.
Rather, the prepared opium is indirectly heated to temperatures at
which the active alkaloids, chiefly morphine, are vaporized. In the
past, smokers would utilize a specially designed
opium pipe which had a removable knob-like
pipe-bowl of fired earthenware attached by a metal fitting to a
long, cylindrical stem. A small "pill" of opium about the size of a
pea would be placed on the pipe-bowl, which was then heated by
holding it over an
opium lamp, a special
oil lamp with a distinct funnel-like chimney to channel heat into a
small area. The smoker would lie on his or her side in order to
guide the pipe-bowl and the tiny pill of opium over the stream of
heat rising from the chimney of the oil lamp and inhale the
vaporized opium fumes as needed. Several pills of opium were smoked
at a single session depending on the smoker's tolerance to the
drug. The effects could last up to twelve hours. Opium in its
rawest form contains half the potency of synthetically compared
drugs; such as OxyContin, morphine patches or trentanol.
In
Eastern culture, opium is more
commonly used in the form of
paregoric to
treat
diarrhea. This is a weaker solution
than
laudanum, an alcoholic tincture which
was prevalently used as a pain medication and sleeping aid.
Tincture of opium has been prescribed for, among other things,
severe diarrhea. Taken thirty minutes prior to meals, it
significantly slows intestinal motility, giving the intestines
greater time to absorb fluid in the stool.
Chemical and physiological properties
Opium contains two main groups of
alkaloids.
Phenanthrenes include
morphine,
codeine, and
thebaine are the main narcotic
constituents.
Isoquinolines such as
papaverine have no significant
central nervous system effects and
are not regulated under the
Controlled Substances Act.
Morphine is by far the most prevalent and important alkaloid in
opium, consisting of 10%-16% of the total, and is responsible for
most of its harmful effects such as
lung
edema, respiratory difficulties, coma, or cardiac or
respiratory collapse, with a normal lethal dose of 120 to 250
milligrams—the amount found in
approximately two grams of opium. Morphine binds to and activates
μ-opioid
receptors in the brain,
spinal cord, stomach and intestine. Regular use leads to physical
tolerance and dependence. Chronic opium addicts in 1906 China or
modern-day Iran consume an average of eight grams daily.
Both
analgesia and
drug addiction are functions of the
mu opioid receptor, the class of
opioid receptor first identified as
responsive to
morphine. Tolerance is
associated with the superactivation of the receptor, which may be
affected by the degree of
endocytosis
caused by the
opioid administered, and leads
to a superactivation of
cyclic AMP
signalling. Long-term use of morphine in
palliative care and management of
chronic pain cannot be managed without the
development of
drug tolerance or
physical dependence. However, it
is important to note that "physical dependence" is the expected
clinical outcome of using opioids in pain management; it should not
be confused with addiction or other forms of "dependence" that are
associated with the disease of addiction. Just as a diabetic is
physically dependent on insulin to treat the disease of diabetes,
so a chronic pain patient will become physically dependent on
opioids such as morphine to treat the disease of chronic pain or to
palliate end-of-life pain. With respect to drug tolerance, the
distinction between chronic pain patients and drug abusers is that
the former will ultimately find that at an appropriate dose of
medication, tolerance develops to the euphoric and other
side-effects of opioid use while pain is successfully controlled
for years at the same dose. A drug abuser or addict posing as a
pain patient will quickly develop tolerance to the euphoric
side-effects of the opioids he is prescribed for pain. As a result,
such patients will demand an increase in their dose at every
opportunity (because as explained previously, tolerance to euphoria
develops much more quickly than tolerance to analgesia).
Many techniques of
drug treatment
exist, including pharmacologically based treatments with
naltrexone,
methadone,
or
ibogaine. However, it should be
emphasized that these treatments are for those suffering from true
opioid addiction, and not from physical dependence resulting from
the appropriate use of opioids for chronic pain. In the event that
a patient with chronic pain no longer suffers from the same degree
of pain, it is not difficult for the patient and treating physician
to gradually taper down the prescribed opioids until the patient
has entirely discontinued opioids use. Of course this is only
possible if the patient's underlying pain has been mitigated,
successfully treated, or otherwise been resolved.
Slang terms (drug-related)
There are a number of
slang terms used for
opium as a drug, often by peddlers and users in doing business.
Several are especially prevalent:
Cultural references
There is a longstanding literary history by and about opium users.
Thomas de Quincey's 1822
Confessions of
an English Opium-Eater is one of the first and most famous
literary accounts of opium addiction written from the point of view
of an addict and details both the pleasures and the dangers of the
drug. De Quincey writes about the great English Romantic poet
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
(1772-1834), whose poem "
Kubla Khan" is
also widely considered to be a poem of the opium experience.
Coleridge began using opium in 1791 after developing
jaundice and
rheumatic
fever and became a full addict after a severe attack of the
disease in 1801, requiring 80-100 drops of laudanum daily. George
Crabbe is another early writer who wrote about opium. "
The Lotos-Eaters," an 1832 poem by
Alfred Lord Tennyson, reflects
the generally favorable British attitude toward the drug. In
The Count of Monte
Cristo (1844) by
Alexandre Dumas, père, the Count
is assuaged by an edible form of opium, and his experience with it
is depicted vividly.
Edgar Allan Poe presents opium in a
more disturbing context in his 1838 short story "
Ligeia," in which the narrator, deeply distraught for
the loss of his beloved, takes solace in opium until he "had become
a bounden slave in the trammels of opium," unable to distinguish
fantasy from reality after taking immoderate doses of opium. In
music,
Hector Berlioz' 1830
Symphony Fantastique
tells the tale of an artist who has poisoned himself with opium
while in the depths of despair for a hopeless love. Each of the
symphony's five
movements takes place at a different
setting and with increasingly
audible effects from the drug. For example, in the fourth movement,
"Marche au Supplice," the artist dreams that he is walking to his
own execution. In the fifth movement, "Songe d’une Nuit du Sabbat,"
he dreams that he is at a
witch's
orgy, where he witnesses his beloved dancing wildly along to
the demented
Dies Irae.
Towards the end of the nineteenth century, references to opium and
opium addiction in the context of crime and the foreign underclass
abound within
English literature,
such as in
Wilkie Collins'
The Moonstone (1868), where
it is used to attempt to uncover the jewel thief. Opium features in
the opening paragraphs of
Charles
Dickens's 1870 serial
The Mystery of Edwin Drood
and in
Arthur Conan Doyle's 1891
Sherlock Holmes short story
"
The Man with the Twisted
Lip." In
Oscar Wilde's 1890
The Picture of Dorian
Gray, the protagonist visits an opium den "for
forgetfulness," unable to bear the guilt and shame of committing
murder. Opium likewise underwent a transformation in Chinese
literature, becoming associated with indolence and vice by the
early twentieth century. Perhaps the best-known literary reference
to opium is
Karl Marx's metaphor in his
"Contribution to the Critique of Hegel's 'Philosophy of Right',"
where he refers to religion as "the opium of the people." (This
phrase is more commonly quoted as "the opiate of the
masses.")
In the twentieth century, as the use of opium was eclipsed by
morphine and
heroin,
its role in literature became more limited, and often focused on
issues related to its prohibition. In
The Good Earth by
Pearl S. Buck,
Wang Lung, the protagonist, gets his troublesome uncle and aunt
addicted to opium in order to keep them out of his hair.
William S. Burroughs autobiographically describes
the use of opium beside that of its derivatives. His associate
Jack Black's memoir
You Can't Win chronicles one man's
experience both as an onlooker in the opium dens of San Francisco,
and later as a "hop fiend" himself. The book and subsequent movie
The Wonderful Wizard of
Oz may allude to opium at one point in the story, when
Dorothy and her friends are drawn into a field of poppies, in which
they fall asleep.
See also
References
Further reading
- Ahmad, Diana L. The Opium Debate and Chinese Exclusion Laws
in the Nineteenth-century American West (University of Nevada
Press, 2007). Drugs and Racism in the Old West.
- Armero and Rapaport. The Arts of an Addiction.
Qing Dynasty Opium Pipes and Accessories (privately
printed, 2005)
- Booth, Martin. Opium: A History. London: Simon &
Schuster, Ltd., 1996.
- Fairbank, J.K. (1978) The Cambridge History of China:
volume 10 part I, Cambridge, CUP
- Franck Daninos, L'opium légal produit en France,
La Recherche, May 2005
- Furek, Maxim W. (2008) The Death Proclamation of Generation X:
A Self-Fulfilling Prophesy of Goth, Grunge and Heroin, i-Universe.
ISBN 978-0-595-46319-0
- Hideyuki Takano; The Shore Beyond Good and Evil: A Report
from Inside Burma's Opium Kingdom (2002, Kotan, ISBN
0970171617)
- Latimer, Dean, and Jeff Goldberg with an Introduction by
William Burroughs. Flowers in the Blood: The Story of
Opium. New York: Franklin Watts, 1981
- Martin, Steven. The Art of Opium Antiques. Chiang Mai:
Silkworm Books, 2007. Photographs and history of Chinese and
Vietnamese opium-smoking paraphernalia.
- McCoy, Alfred W. The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in
the Global Drug Trade. New York: Lawrence Hill Books,
1991.
- Musto, David F. The American Disease: Origins of Narcotic
Control. New York: Oxford University Press, 1987.
External links