About the Book
We live in an age when the cigarette industry is under almost constant attack. Few weeks pass without yet another report on the hazards of smoking, or news of another anti-cigarette lawsuit, or more restrictions on cigarette sales, advertising, or use. It's somewhat surprising, then, that very little attention has been given to the fact that America has traveled down this road before.Until now, that is. As Cassandra Tate reports in this
fascinating work of historical scholarship, between 1890 and 1930, fifteen states enacted laws to ban the sale, manufacture, possession, and/or use of cigarettes--and no fewer than twenty-two other states
considered such legislation. In presenting the history of America's first conflicts with Big Tobacco, Tate draws on a wide range of newspapers, magazines, trade publications, rare pamphlets, and many other manuscripts culled from archives across the country. Her thorough and meticulously researched volume is also attractively illustrated with numerous photographs, posters, and cartoons from this bygone era.Readers will find in Cigarette Wars an engagingly written
and well-told tale of the first anti-cigarette movement, dating from the Victorian Age to the Great Depression, when cigarettes were both legally restricted and socially stigmatized in America. Progressive
reformers and religious fundamentalists came together to curb smoking, but their efforts collapsed during World War I, when millions of soldiers took up the habit and cigarettes began to be associated with freedom, modernity, and sophistication. Importantly, Tate also illustrates how supporters of the early anti-cigarette movement articulated virtually every issue that is still being debated about smoking today; theirs was not a failure of determination, she argues in these pages, but of
timing.A compelling narrative about several clashing American traditions--old vs. young, rural vs. urban, and the late nineteenth vs. early twentieth centuries--this work will appeal to
all who are interested in America's love-hate relationship with what Henry Ford once called "the little white slaver."
Table of Contents:
Introduction
1: Birth of the Coffin Nail
2: The Clean Life Crusade
3: The Little White Slaver Goes to War
4: Milady's Cigarette
5: The "Triumph" of the Cigarette
Conclusion
Coda
About the Author :
Cassandra Tate worked as a journalist for twenty years before earning a Ph.D. in history at the University of Washington in 1995. She currently works in the field of interactive media in Seattle.
Review :
"Cassandra Tate has explored the first half century of cigarettes' cultural evolution, beginning when the American mainstream associated cigarette smoking with rough-and-ready boys, dandies, and improper women. In this cultural climate, cigarettes become the object of a broad and impassioned Progressive Era reform movement seeking to ban them....Tate's analysis of the transition to widespread acceptability...explores how and why, by 1930, cigarettes became a
standard prop for people of all classes wishing to proclaim their daring and cosmopolitan sharpness."--Reviews in American History
"This fine study...provides excellent perspective on a crucial era as background for today's battles."--Library Journal
"In this original and engaging book, Cassandra Tate traces the first major anti-cigarette crusade--the battle of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries against the 'little white slaver'. Cigarette Wars offers a fascinating and important narrative of the failure of this 'other' prohibition movement as Americans and their new consumer culture embraced the cigarette. As Tate so successfully demonstrates, the battle over smoking provides an
excellent vehicle to understand central values in American society and culture."--Allan M. Brandt, Harvard University
"Anyone interested in today's escalating political and legal battle in the long war against the cigarette will applaud Cassandra Tate's timely Cigarette Wars. At last, the first half-century of the bitter cultural war has its historian, or narrator, who has produced a book distinguished by graceful prose, vivid characters and events, and sure-footed judgement. This is narrative history at its best, a story whose lessons for today Tate draws together at
the end. Warriors Koop and Kessler, meet Lucy Page Gaston, and the zeal-deflating powers of historical perspective."--Otis L. Graham, Jr., University of North Carolina at Wilmington
"Cassandra Tate has written an engaging, thorough, and illuminating account of early efforts to stamp out cigarettes in America. Cigarette Wars lends much-needed historical perspective to the ongoing controversy over smoking."--Jacob Sullum, author of For Your Own Good: The Anti-Smoking Crusade and the Tyranny of Public Health
"Clear, concise, and lively, Tate's book is the first to document the initial anticigarette movement, which she links to the larger context of the Progressive Era, temperance, women's history, and even military history."--The Journal of American History
"In a thought-provoking and interesting style, journalist Cassandra Tate, writes not only of the overwhelming public support for the Anti-Cigarette League of America, but of the untimely distancing of the prohibition movement from the anti-cigarette campaign."--Economic History Services
"I've read this book twice and it still amazes. The New York Times condemned nicotine's 'disastrous effects' in 1879? Anti-tobacco campaigns are more than a century old? Cigarettes were thought perilous because of their link to sex? Cigarette Wars surprises, informs, and shakes convictions (or mine, at least) in prose as lucid as it is engaging. It's a hell of a story."--Paul Solman, Economics Correspondent, The NewsHour with Jim
Lehrer
"Thought-provoking and interesting....chockablock with historical information, including excellent notes and an informative appendix listing state cigarette prohibitive laws." --Kay Kiefer in EH.NET
"An entertaining account of a little-known episode in American cultural history, and a keen reminder that the ever-embattled cigarette has risen from its ashes more than once"--Kirkus Reviews
"An eloquent case for the role of culture in tobacco use...[T]hose involved in today's tobacco wars are likely to learn much from the history Tate recounts."--Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco Newsletter
"[A] compelling work of cultural history. Better than any other scholar to date, [Tate] highlights the frenzied attempts by various reformers to rid society of what Henry Ford once termed the 'little white slaver' through prohibition schemes before and after World War I...[A] fine study that raises a number of questions on the relative merits of addiction, mass advertising, and cultural assimilation and casts a provocative light on a little-known reform
effort...[A] well-researched and very readable book that will interest a large number of American cultural and social historians."--American Historical Review