Article ID: CBB590559172

"Volksseuche" oder Randerscheinung? (Popular epidemic or marginal phenomenon?) (2017)

unapi

An empirical investigation refutes the popular conception that excessive drug usage was a widespread social phenomenon in the Weimar Republic. Although physicians warned the public and politicians of a “cocaine wave” that threatened the public health, there is no evidence that indicates a significant increase of cocaine use during the twenties. The decisive cause for this moral panic was caused instead by the disease pattern of “Cocainism”. The addiction carried the imprint of an infectious disease and would destroy the body, the will, and the civic life of its victims. According to medical doctrine, chronic cocaine consumption also produced the tendency towards deviant sexual activities and criminal activity. For this reason, the use of this substance was in particular linked to deviant social milieus like the so-called Bohemian or demimonde. However, historical sources in fact show that it was primarily a problem of the medical professions. Against the background of the desperate political, social and economic situation in Germany after the First World War, physicians regarded cocaine and morphine addictions as a threat to the hoped for political and biological renewal of the nation.

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Authors & Contributors
Plumpe, Werner
Stephen P. Walker
Monika Ankele
Michael Pfeiffer
Andrea H. Schneider-Braunberger
Gianluca Nesi
Journals
Zeitschrift für Unternehmensgeschichte
Medical History
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Social History of Medicine
Medizinhistorisches Journal
Journal of the History of Sexuality
Publishers
Bryn Mawr College, Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research
Insegna del Giglio
Harvard University Press
European Association for the History of Medicine and Health Publications
Concepts
Psychiatry
Sexuality
Crime
Medicine
Medicine and society
Sexual behavior
People
Jaensch, Walther (1889-1950)
Langelüddeke, Albrecht
Moll, Albert
Krafft-Ebing, Richard von
Freud, Sigmund
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
20th century, early
21st century
Places
Germany
Weimar Republic (1919-1933)
United States
Great Britain
Hamburg-Langenhorn (Germany)
Baghdad (Iraq)
Institutions
Rockefeller Foundation
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