
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


From Thomas De Quincy via Coleridge to Berlioz, a second-generation opium addict, Daisy Hay and Richard Davenport-Hines discuss why drugs were thought integral to creativity first in England and later in France. They tell Matthew Sweet and an audience at Imperial College London about opium as pain relief and creator of dreams and constipation, why arsenic was the Viagra of its day, and why it's just possible that Paris was as revolutionary as it was in the 19th century because it was full of drug-taking rebels.
By BBC Radio 44.3
286286 ratings
From Thomas De Quincy via Coleridge to Berlioz, a second-generation opium addict, Daisy Hay and Richard Davenport-Hines discuss why drugs were thought integral to creativity first in England and later in France. They tell Matthew Sweet and an audience at Imperial College London about opium as pain relief and creator of dreams and constipation, why arsenic was the Viagra of its day, and why it's just possible that Paris was as revolutionary as it was in the 19th century because it was full of drug-taking rebels.

7,682 Listeners

305 Listeners

1,078 Listeners

1,048 Listeners

5,534 Listeners

1,793 Listeners

608 Listeners

1,778 Listeners

1,040 Listeners

1,926 Listeners

493 Listeners

584 Listeners

134 Listeners

128 Listeners

164 Listeners

245 Listeners

183 Listeners

212 Listeners

3,171 Listeners

1,003 Listeners

147 Listeners

120 Listeners

89 Listeners

329 Listeners