Book ID: CBB001213617

Duo yuan xiang qian yu chuang zao zhuan hua: Taiwan gong gong wei sheng bai nian shi (2011)

unapi

Fan, Yanqiu (Editor)


Yuan liu chu ban shi ye gu fen you xian gong si


Publication Date: 2011
Edition Details: [Translated title.] In Chinese. Diverse Embeddedness and Creative Transformation: A Century of Public Health in Taiwan.
Physical Details: iv + 465 pp.; ill.; maps
Language: EnglishChinese

Excerpt from review: The history and development of public health have attracted a growing scholarly interest. Numerous studies have examined the role of the state, its motives, and the formulation of policy. Fan Yen-Chiou, a historian specializing in colonial medicine, has previously worked on Japan's role in shaping and modernizing Taiwan's public health infrastructure in the first half of the twentieth century. Taiwan's experience of colonial modernity is considered unique: Japan intended to turn its first colony into a showpiece of modernization. Diverse Embeddedness and Creative Transformation: A Century of Public Health in Taiwan comprises twelve chapters contributed by researchers from Taiwan, Korea, and Japan. While addressing different topics, all these studies tackle the dynamic interactions among multiple players (always including the state) in formulating public health initiatives during the colonial period and its aftermath. In the first chapter, "Quarantine, International Relations, and East Asia," Wakimura Kohei compares the quarantine policies adopted in East Asia in the late nineteenth century and the period between the two world wars. Wakimura finds that before the fall of the Qing, fairly lax quarantine policies were implemented in China and Japan, which were developed for the sake of securing commercial interests of elite groups and Westerners. At that time, the Qing had only very limited tools for combating infectious diseases, and though Japan hoped to enact more rigorous quarantine measures for the general public, these were opposed by the Western powers because of concerns of potential restriction on trade. In contrast, during the years between the two world wars, China and Japan took control of their own quarantine policies. Wakimura concludes that the changes they brought about emerged from multiple factors, including the restructuring of international powers, the region's changing politics, and the impacts of a series of major epidemics at the turn of the twentieth century. This study illustrates the importance of incorporating wider contextual factors, setting political and economic issues in a global context to understand the formulation of domestic health policy. In "Colonial Modernity and the Sanitary Police in Korea," Jung Keun-sik studies the changes in administrative structures and policy implemented by Korea's sanitary police. He concludes that this institution played a pivotal role in exerting governing power---not only in the colonial period but also in the aftermath of the Korean War, when international power relations underwent a rapid restructuring. Jung provides abundant historical data and describes the activities of the sanitary police in great detail. This study is informative, but it could be improved by adding an analytical framework and some comparisons with other nations. In "A Historical Study of Cinchona Cultivation and Antimalaria Drugs in Colonial Taiwan," Ku Ya-wen describes cinchona cultivation in Meiji Japan (1875- 1911) and colonial Taiwan (1895-1945). Ku's study indicates that in early years cinchona was viewed as a profitable cash crop, in later years as medicinal plants, and during the war years as the source of antimalaria drugs that made a critical contribution to the soldiers' health. By focusing on cinchona, Ku reconstructs a marketable product in the changing dynamics of the state, the market, and the health needs of different populations. But without providing information concerning malarial infection rates and disease control policies, Ku has made it hard for the reader to fully comprehend the dynamics of cinchona cultivation and malaria control. In "Digenea: A Medicine for Ascariasis," Chang Su-bing examines the ascariasis pandemic that took place in Taiwan from 1921 to 1945, explaining how digenea, an ancient herbal medicine, became the preferred treatment. Chang also explains why the efforts of the colonial government to curb widespread ascariasis failed, in spite of a sufficient supply of digenea. In her effort to explain the causes of the epidemic, the author mentions unhygienic agricultural practices such as using contaminated manure as fertilizer, but elsewhere she argues that the outbreak was not related to agriculture or sanitation. A better discussion of causes would clarify the author's argument. Another minor drawback is that information about the prevalence of ascariasis and preventive measures is provided only to 1937, eight years short of the study's terminal date.

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Reviewed By

Review Cheng, Yawen; Tseng, Yu-Hwei (2013) Review of "Duo yuan xiang qian yu chuang zao zhuan hua: Taiwan gong gong wei sheng bai nian shi". East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal (pp. 319-322). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001213617/

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Authors & Contributors
Hsien-Chun Wang
Keck, Frédéric
Ichikawa, Tomoo
Tsuru, Shuntaro
Shin, Y. J.
Moon, Mira
Journals
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
Korean Journal of Medical History
Technology and Culture
Taiwanshi yenjiu (Taiwan Historical Research)
Medical History
Indian Journal of History of Science
Publishers
Routledge
University of Tokyo Center for Philosophy
Hong Kong University Press
Harvard University Asia Center
Harrassowitz
Concepts
Colonialism
Public health
Medicine
Japan, colonies
Cross-cultural interaction; cultural influence
Postcolonialism
People
Choe Ung-sok
Goto, Shinpei
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
20th century, early
21st century
Early modern
Ancient
Places
Japan
China
Taiwan
Korea
East Asia
Hong Kong
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