Stockholm university

Research project Intoxicating Spaces,The Impact of New Intoxicants on Urban Spaces in Europe, 1600–1850

From the 17th century, emerging imperial and trading networks of people, knowledge, and goods from across the world introduced Europeans to a many ‘new intoxicants’: cocoa, coffee, opium, sugar, tea, and tobacco. In a ‘psychoactive revolution’, these substances transformed dietary and social habits, and became mainstays of modern global economies.

Focusing on four European cities between c.1600 and c.1850 – Amsterdam, Hamburg, London, and Stockholm – this three-year project (2019–22) explores the impact of new intoxicants on urban public spaces, the role of urban public spaces in assimilating them into European behaviours, and the often exploitative international systems through which they were produced, trafficked, and consumed. Via events, an online exhibition, and work with schools, museums, and non-governmental organizations, the projext demonstrates how the understanding these processes offers a vital historical perspective on urgent contemporary questions surrounding drug use and abuse, addiction, migration, inclusion and exclusion within public spaces, and the place of intoxicating substances within everyday life.

For more information, visit the project's extensive own website: https://www.intoxicatingspaces.org/

Project members

Project managers

Members

Ulrika Torell

Ph.D.

Nordic History Museum, Departmen of History at Stockholm University

Internationella forskare

Hitta samtliga forskare i projektet

"Intoxicating spaces" - projektets egen hemsida
Litografi: teckning av kvinna i huckle som tänder en pipa. En man håller en arm om henne.