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Chapter 2 - Crack the Market: Commodification and Commercialization

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 October 2019

David Farber
Affiliation:
University of Kansas
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Summary

In 1972, a drug aficionado could stop by his local “head shop” and pick up a copy of The Gourmet Cokebook: A Complete Guide to Cocaine, published anonymously by the aptly named White Mountain Press. In it, he could find a simple recipe for cooking up a batch of crack. It was easy: Mix equal parts of powder cocaine and baking soda in a pot, add water, boil, let cool, and then break the hardened, desiccated mass into small pieces – rocks – suitable for smoking. Smoked cocaine, the cokehead learned, produced a more intense, if shorter-lived, high than snorted cocaine. Smoked cocaine goes straight into the lungs, where it is rapidly absorbed into the bloodstream, from whence it zooms into the smoker’s brain; physiologically speaking, this is a much more efficient and effective process than snorting cocaine. Nasal membranes just cannot compete with the lungs for getting the drug to where it counts.

Type
Chapter
Information
Crack
Rock Cocaine, Street Capitalism, and the Decade of Greed
, pp. 38 - 77
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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