Lee, Victoria (Author)
This dissertation explores how Japanese scientists and skilled workers sought to use microbes' natural processes to create new forms and products of life. Processes of microbial biosynthesis were ubiquitous in Japan, from miso-making in the kitchen, to soy-sauce mold starters and vitamins, and to monosodium glutamate and statins in which Japan led globally as an innovator and that scientists called "gifts from microorganisms." In traditional brewing houses and in the food, fine chemical and pharmaceutical industries across the country, scientists and skilled workers came to study microbial life and to tinker with life as fermentation phenomena. Such practices destabilize our notions of life at the edge of our current knowledge. I trace the institutions and technologies of fermentation and look for points of connection from the turn of the twentieth century to the early 1960s. By focusing on a fermentation-based vision of life that took shape in Japan, I examine the role of cultural and technical continuities with the premodern period in sustaining Japan's technological breakthroughs in the global economy. This dissertation seeks to understand what it means to study modern science in a non-Western context. When we look through the eyes and hands of Japanese scientists and technologists, we see categories of investigation that were distinctive to that society and which owed their existence at least partly to premodern practices of fermentation. By focusing on the significance of knowledge within traditional and small-scale industries, this dissertation demonstrates that craft knowledge lay at the heart of Japanese scientific and technological contributions in the late twentieth century. The study also presents a view of how a non-Western society understood life as technological potentiality, focusing on what living things can do or be asked to do. It offers a historical point of comparison as scientists increasingly seek to know life by intervening in and recreating life, as notions of biological determinism soften with new awareness of interactions between ourselves, other organisms, and the environment, and as the microbial world takes a new centrality in debates on biotechnologies. Finally, this dissertation contributes to our understanding of ecologies in Japanese cultural life, economic organization, and moral consciousness. Through an ecological vision of national self-sufficiency that dominated fermentation science, it explores how broader debates on environmental management impacted material culture at the level of food, resources, and medicine. Citation : Lee, Victoria. "The Arts of the Microbial World: Biosynthetic Technologies in Twentieth-Century Japan." Ph.D. diss, Princeton University, 2014.
...MoreDescription Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 76/03(E), Sep 2015. Proquest Document ID: 1622386199.
Article
Osaki, Toshihiko;
Kameyama, Tetsuya;
(2003)
The Role of National Institutions in the Industrialization of Aichi Prefecture: I. The Establishment of Nagoya Branches of Mechanical Engineering Laboratory and Government Chemical Industrial Research Institute, Tokyo, Part 1
Article
Benjamin Aldes Wurgaft;
(2020)
Meat Mimesis: Laboratory-Grown Meat as a Study in Copying
Thesis
Renner, Martin;
(2012)
Conservative Nutrition: The Industrial Food Supply and Its Critics, 1915--1985
Chapter
Moulin, Anne-Marie;
(1998)
Une généalogie scientifique: L'Isnad de l'Institut Pasteur de Tunis (1893-1993)
Book
Cavallo, Giorgio;
(2001)
C'era una volta l'Istituto: momenti e figure della ricerca scientifica tra guerra e ricostruzione
Article
Löwy, Ilana;
(1994)
On hybridizations, networks and new disciplines: The Pasteur Institute and the development of microbiology in France
Book
Tobies, Renate;
Vogt, Annette B.;
(2014)
Women in Industrial Research
Article
Donnelly, Catherine;
(2013)
75 Years of IFT: Food Microbiology in JFS--1936 to Present
Article
Élise Demeulenaere;
(2025)
In search of the microbial path to Terroir: a place-based history of the ecologization of French cheese microbiology, 1990–2000s
Article
Sumner, James;
(2008)
Status, Scale and Secret Ingredients: The Retrospective Invention of London Porter
Article
Petrick, Gabriella M.;
(2011)
“Purity as Life”: H. J. Heinz, Religious Sentiment, and the Beginning of the Industrial Diet
Article
Voelkel, James;
(2011)
Secret Ingredient
Thesis
Joel Dickau;
(2023)
Inventing Texture: Food Science and Culinary Culture in Postwar America
Article
Victoria Lee;
(2018)
Microbial Transformations: The Japanese Domestication of Penicillin Production, 1946–1951
Book
Victoria Lee;
(2021)
The Arts of the Microbial World: Fermentation Science in Twentieth-Century Japan
Book
Nye, David;
(2013)
America's Assembly Line
Book
Pierre Darmon;
(2020)
Défense de cracher !: Pollution, environnement et santé à la Belle Époque
Article
Nakajima, Hiroshi;
Ishiguro, Masato;
Orchiston, Wayne;
Akabane, Kenji;
Enome, Shinzo;
Hayashi, Masa;
Kaifu, Norio;
Nakamura, Tsuko;
Tsuchiya, Atsushi;
(2014)
Highlighting the History of Japanese Radio Astronomy. 3: Early Solar Radio Research at the Tokyo Astronomical Observatory
Article
Kameyama, Tetsuya;
(2011)
Chemical Industry and the Role of Rsearch Institutes in Japan: National Temporary Nitrogen Laboratory and National Pottery Rsearch Institute
Article
Victoria Lee;
(2019)
Wild Toxicity, Cultivated Safety: Aflatoxin and Kōji Classification as Knowledge Infrastructure
Be the first to comment!