
New Books in History Benjamin Robert Siegel, "Markets of Pain: Opium, Capitalism, and the Global History of Painkillers" (Oxford UP, 2026)
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May 13, 2026 Benjamin Robert Siegel, historian and Boston University associate professor who studies commodity chains, discusses his book on the global history of licit opium. He traces poppy cultivation from India, Turkey, and Tasmania to labs and clinics. Conversations cover how states, science, and trade shaped painkillers, divergent national paths, and contemporary supply and policy risks.
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Licit And Illicit Opium Were Tangled Economies
- Licit and illicit opium markets are interwoven and hard to separate in the 20th century.
- Siegel centers the licit trade, showing colonial and state actors managed opium as a legal commodity even as black markets persisted.
Peasant Testimony Reveals Opium's Everyday Uses
- Peasant witnesses like Punit Singh described opium as a multiuse medicine tied to constrained choices.
- Their testimony to the 1892–94 Royal Commission showed opium soothed labor pains, pregnancy, and elderly ailments in everyday life.
States Used Opium As Strategic Economic Policy
- Bureaucrats, scientists, and cultivators shaped licit-opium policy for political and economic aims.
- Commissioner Nargawala traveled globally pitching opium production as a foreign-currency generator for the Indian state.








