About This Book
The book traces the social evolution of tobacco use in England from its early adoption through waves of fashion, decline, and revival. It examines how different forms of tobacco—pipe, cigar, cigarette—rose or fell in respectability and practice across social classes. It surveys the economic and material aspects of smoking, including sellers, signs, and smoking implements, and describes conventions, restrictions, and public attitudes. Later chapters address changing gender practices and occasions such as religious settings. The narrative combines chronological chapters with social anecdotes and documentary references to illuminate how smoking became increasingly widespread and socially normalized by the twentieth century.
About the Author
You May Also Like
6 picks
A caution to Great Britain and her colonies, in a short representation of the calamitous state of the enslaved Negroes in the British dominions
by Anthony Benezet
Yachting, Vol. 2
by R. T. Pritchett
The Inns and Taverns of "Pickwick" / With Some Observations on Their Other Associations
by B. W. Matz
Economic effects of the world war upon women and children in Great Britain
by Irene Osgood Andrews
The Courtships of Queen Elizabeth / A history of the various negotiations for her marriage
by Martin A. S. Hume
The Government of England (Vol. I)
by A. Lawrence Lowell