The Fujitsuru Mystery: Translocal Xiamen, Japanese Expansionism, and the Asian Cocaine Trade, 1900–1937

Peter Thilly
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Abstract

ABSTRACT:This article examines the Asian cocaine trade of the early twentieth century. It argues that the distribution of cocaine into Asian colonial ports was controlled by people from southeastern China who took advantage of a convergence of factors: consumer markets in India and Southeast Asia, shifting political winds surrounding drug use, the rise of Japan, and the translocal nature of southern Fujianese society. Xiamen was not only a port but also the hub of a society that was omnipresent in the maritime world of early twentieth-century Asia: natives of southern Fujian resided in Calcutta, Singapore, Rangoon, Manila, and Kobe, constituting a huge percentage of the crew and passengers of the steamships that connected those places. The implications of this story are relevant to two important themes of this special issue: the history of control and evasion in maritime Asia, and, relatedly, the ways in which states sought to extend their jurisdiction over the seas. Fujianese cocaine smugglers saw an opportunity when colonial governments banned cocaine imports, and took advantage of their place within the Japanese imperial sphere to acquire drugs and penetrate colonial markets. The evidence presented here thus highlights the place of opportunism and entrepreneurialism within the wider history of state efforts to control trade.
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藤津之谜:1900-1937年的厦门、日本扩张主义和亚洲可卡因贸易
摘要:本文考察了二十世纪初的亚洲可卡因贸易。它认为,可卡因在亚洲殖民地港口的分销是由来自中国东南部的人控制的,他们利用了一系列因素:印度和东南亚的消费市场、围绕毒品使用的政治风向的转变、日本的崛起以及闽南社会的跨地性。厦门不仅是一个港口,而且是一个社会的中心,这个社会在20世纪初的亚洲海洋世界中无处不在:闽南人居住在加尔各答、新加坡、仰光、马尼拉和神户,在连接这些地方的蒸汽船的船员和乘客中占很大比例。这个故事的含义与本期特刊的两个重要主题有关:亚洲海洋控制和规避的历史,以及各国寻求扩大其海洋管辖权的方式。当殖民政府禁止可卡因进口时,福建可卡因走私者看到了一个机会,并利用他们在日本帝国范围内的地位获取毒品并打入殖民市场。因此,这里提供的证据突出了机会主义和创业主义在国家控制贸易的更广泛历史中的地位。
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