Thesis ID: CBB563831507

Family Matters: Managing Illness in Late Tokugawa Japan, 1750-1868 (2015)

unapi

This dissertation explores how people living in the city of Edo (present-day Tokyo) in the latter half of the Tokugawa period (1603–1868) dealt with illness. Doctor-based care has most often captured the attention of historians, but the proportion of time doctors physically spent with patients was dwarfed by that provided by domestic caregivers. To elucidate the medical landscape of Edo and describe how urban residents cared for sick family members, I draw from a rich body of family records. These include more than a dozen diaries and over fifty family records written between 1750 and 1868, composed by men and women of diverse social status and occupation such as samurai, commoners, popular authors, and doctors. Chapter One illustrates how day-to-day management of illness was implemented by family members rather than by medical practitioners, demonstrating the key role of women as mobile caregivers and the ways in which illness bound families together. Chapter Two examines what sufferers consumed when they fell ill, revealing the importance of adjusting diet, self-medicating, and record keeping within the home. Chapter Three depicts the role of religious sites and therapies in the lives of Edo residents, showing the importance of family members’ prayer by proxy. Against this backdrop of therapeutic options, Chapter Four explores how families interacted with medical practitioners by using the records of three Edo physicians to trace their daily routines. Diaries of families who hired physicians show that they often saw several doctors over the course of a single illness. Seeing a doctor was not a binary relationship between patient and practitioner but an enterprise that mobilized multiple family members. Chapter Five argues that illness in late Tokugawa Japan was a social event on the scale of weddings or births—one that could bring dozens of visitors to the home, all bringing gifts. In total, this dissertation contends that health care in early modern Japan was rooted in the family, and that the patterns of therapeutic practice seen in early modern diaries were fundamentally shaped by familial participation in illness management.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB563831507/

Similar Citations

Article Bernabeu-Mestre, J.; Cid Santos, A. P.; Esplugues Pellicer, J. X.; Galiana-Sánchez, M. E.; (2008)
Categorías diagnósticas y género: los ejemplos de la clorosis y la neurastenia en la medicina española contemporánea (1877--1936) (/isis/citation/CBB000931877/)

Book Chiang, Howard Hsueh-Hao; (2014)
Psychiatry and Chinese History (/isis/citation/CBB001422492/)

Book Cathy McClive; (2015)
Menstruation and Procreation in Early Modern France (/isis/citation/CBB727827348/)

Article Kassell, Lauren; (2014)
Casebooks in Early Modern England: Medicine, Astrology, and Written Records (/isis/citation/CBB001202352/)

Thesis Bay, Alexander R.; (2006)
The Politics of Disease: Beriberi, Barley, and Medicine in Modern Japan (1700--1939) (/isis/citation/CBB001560614/)

Article Johnston, William D.; (2009)
Sexually Transmitted Diseases and Demographic Change in Early Modern Japan (/isis/citation/CBB001021353/)

Thesis Marcon, Federico; (2007)
The Names of Nature: The Development of Natural History in Japan, 1600--1900 (/isis/citation/CBB001560689/)

Article Nakamura, Ellen; (2013)
The Private World of a Meiji-era Japanese Doctor: Ishii Kendō's Diary of 1874 (/isis/citation/CBB001213441/)

Book Hoyle, R W; (2013)
The Farmer in England, 1650--1980 (/isis/citation/CBB001422268/)

Article Huerta Jaramillo, Ana Maria Dolores; (2012)
Fontes para a história da ciência: a higiene das vestimentas desde Puebla (/isis/citation/CBB001212606/)

Article W. Evan Young; (2018)
Domesticating Medicine: The Production of Familial Knowledge in Nineteenth-Century Japan (/isis/citation/CBB296184847/)

Thesis Wu, Y.-C.; (cited 2012)
A Disorder of Ki: Alternative Treatments for Neurasthenia in Japan, 1890--1945 (/isis/citation/CBB001567409/)

Book James Uden; (2022)
Worlds of Knowledge in Women’s Travel Writing (/isis/citation/CBB070453785/)

Article Bühler, Karl-Ernst; Heim, Gerhard; (2010)
Ätiologie, Pathogenese und Therapie der dissoziativen und Konversionsstörungen (Hysterien) nach Pierre Janet (/isis/citation/CBB001032258/)

Article Laws, Jennifer; (2010)
Crackpots and Basket-Cases: A History of Therapeutic Work and Occupation (/isis/citation/CBB001035606/)

Article Dudley, Anú King; (2010)
Moxa in Nineteenth-Century Medical Practice (/isis/citation/CBB001034281/)

Authors & Contributors
William Evan Young
James Uden
Wu, Y.-C.
Hoyle, R. W.
Willis, Clive
Rajan, Supritha
Journals
Würzburger Medizinhistorische Mitteilungen
Victorian Literature and Culture
Social History of Medicine
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
History of the Human Sciences
History of Psychiatry
Publishers
Ashgate
University of London, University College London (United Kingdom
Dalhousie University (Canada)
Texas Tech University Press
Pickering & Chatto
Ilex
Concepts
Medicine
Women
Mental disorders and diseases
Therapeutic practice; therapy; treatment
Diaries
Disease and diseases
People
Janet, Pierre
Dickens, Charles
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century
Early modern
17th century
Meiji period (Japan, 1868-1910)
Places
Japan
France
England
Spain
Falkland Islands
Ethiopia
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment