HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesThe history and ecology of why we get drunk

The history and ecology of why we get drunk

Edward Slingerland’s new book tries to explain why human beings are the only species that deliberately, systematically, and regularly gets high.

June 26, 2021 / 10:21 IST
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'Walking the Chalk' by Charles Deas. (Image: via Wikimedia Commons)
'Walking the Chalk' by Charles Deas. (Image: via Wikimedia Commons)

In Thomas Vinterberg’s Another Round, which won the Oscar for best international feature film this year, some schoolteachers test a theory that consistently high blood alcohol levels bring about greater relaxation and contentment. For them, this leads to varying outcomes; for human beings as a whole, however, alcohol has always played an outsize role.

This is what Edward Slingerland sets out to explore in Drunk, his pithily-titled new book. As the subtitle has it, it examines how we sipped, danced, and stumbled our way to civilisation.

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It’s a wide-ranging work that draws on archaeology, anthropology, history, neuroscience, literature, and genetics to provide explanations for our determination to get sloshed. Though it can be repetitive and digressive, it’s also illuminating and effervescent.

Slingerland points to the use of alcoholic beverages almost from the start of recorded time. There are several instances: drinking beer is one way in which Enkidu from the Epic of Gilgamesh becomes “civilised”; nomads of Central Asia have made alcohol from fermented mare’s milk since antiquity; and, of course, there’s soma, the ritual drink of the Vedic Indo-Aryans. Given all this, archaeologist Patrick McGovern has only semi-facetiously suggested that we should be referred to as homo imbibens.