
By pointing out the artificiality inherent in
the distinction between so-called licit and illicit
drugs, judge MariaLucia Karam demonstrates the
social construction character of prohibitionism in
this field, a theme developed throughout this
text, especially from a historical perspective.
In fact, although it was made an illicit
drug in the last century, previously, marijuana
was not only legal, but was also a relevant
economic input in Europe, used since Paleolithic
times. Written with the same seven letters, the
word marijuana is an anagram of hemp, a raw
material of great importance in the Renaissance.
Gutenberg used hemp paper to produce the first
135 printed Bibles in the world, one of these
copies being located in the collection of the
National Library, in Cinelândia, Rio de Janeiro.
Origin and History of CultureCannabica in the World and in
Brazil
In the Renaissance, marijuana was one of
the main agricultural products in Europe. Proof
of its great influence in changing mentalities is
that, in addition to the hemp paper pages of the
first printed books, artists painted on canvases
made from its fibers. So much so that the word
Canvas, used in several languages to designate
“canvas”, is a Dutch corruption of the Latin
'cannabis': hence the word 'oil on canvas'.
Since antiquity,the Greek and the Romans
used candles and rope hemp on ships. In the
15th century, cultivated in the regions of
Bordeaux and Brittany, France, Portugal and
Africa, hemp was used for making strings, cables,
sails and sealing material on boats, which
frequently flooded on long voyages.
Number of pages | 61 |
Edition | 1 (2023) |
Format | A5 (148x210) |
Binding | Paperback w/ flaps |
Colour | Black & white |
Paper type | Uncoated offset 75g |
Language | English |
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