Additional Resources and References

Additional sources and References

Barker, J. C., & Hunt, G. (2004). Representations of family: A review of the alcohol and drug literature. International Journal of Drug Policy15(5-6), 347-356.

Bliss, H. S., & Bliss, D. T. (1949). Coleridge's Kubla Khan. American Imago6(4), 261.

Byrne, P. (1997). Trainspotting and the depiction of addiction. Psychiatric Bulletin21(3), 173-175.

Coleridge, S. T., & Bourquin, T. (1910). Kubla khan. Queensland Braille Writing Association.

Colman, A. (2019). Drugs and the Addiction Aesthetic in Nineteenth-Century Literature. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.

Daly, N. (2010). Inventing the Addict: Drugs, Race, and Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century British and American Literature. Victorian Studies52(4), 655-656.

De Quincey, T. (2013). Confessions of an English opium-eater and other writings. Oxford University Press.

Day, E., & Smith, I. (2003). Literary and biographical perspectives on substance use. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment9(1), 62-68.

Roušová, H. (2019). Heroin/Heroine: Addiction as Narrative and Transgression in Junky and Trainspotting.

Ruston, S. (2014). Representations of drugs in 19th-century literature. Retrieved online from https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/representations-of-drugs-in-19th-century-literature.

Self, W. (2014). William Burroughs–the Original Junkie. The Guardian”, Saturday, 1.

Schoene, B. (2010). Welsh, drugs and subculture. The Edinburgh Companion to Irvine Welsh, 65-76.

Townsend, M. (2008). Drugs in literature: A brief history. Retrieved online from https://www.theguardian.com/society/2008/nov/16/drugs-history-literature

Wermer-Colan, A. (2010). Implicating the confessor: the autobiographical ploy in William S. Burroughs's early work. Twentieth century literature56(4), 493-529.

Welsh, C. J. (2003). OD’s and DT’s: using movies to teach intoxication and withdrawal syndromes to medical students. Academic Psychiatry27(3), 182-186.

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