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English
Routledge
18 June 2025
Fujimoto, Homei, and Nakamura bring together the perspectives of women engaging in professional medical work across the expanse of the modern Japanese Empire (1868–1945). Through translations of primary source documents in three East Asian languages, this collection provides a window into the experiences of women working in a variety of medical professions, including doctors, nurses, midwives, and nutritionists. The voices of these women, collected from books, magazines, diaries, roundtable discussions, and oral histories, speak of the challenges, hopes, triumphs, and at times despair that women faced in their medical studies and workplaces.

While the women represent a kaleidoscope of political views both critical and supportive of the Japanese empire, this book demonstrates the significance of the Japanese nation and empire for many of these women. Their stories show how they pushed boundaries, traversed national or regional borders in search of medical opportunities, or attempted to carve out new spaces for women through their service as medical professionals.

This work, which includes little studied sources never before accessible in English, will appeal to scholars and students of history, Asian studies, gender history/studies, and the history of science, technology, and medicine.
Edited by:   , , , ,
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   600g
ISBN:   9781032744582
ISBN 10:   1032744588
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Primary ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Introduction: Restoring the Voices of Medical Women in the Japanese Empire 1. Critique: Layers of Translation: A Linguistic Strategy for the Professionalization of Midwifery in the Early Meiji Period, Text: Kido Rin, A Manual for Midwives (1886) 2 Critique: With Scornful Laughter Rumbling in her Ears: Ogino Ginko’s Critics and Supporters, Text: Ogino Ginko, “The Career of the First Modern Female Doctor” (1893) 3. Critique: “Home Doctors”: Yoshioka Yayoi’s Strategy to Promote Women Doctors in Modern Japan, Text: Yoshioka Yayoi, The Future of Women Doctors and Their Missions (1936) 4. Critique: Nutritionists, Gender, and Public Health in Japan, 1936–1940, Text: Kondō Toshiko, Rootwork (1979) 5. Critique: Resilient Paths: Opportunities and Challenges for Chinese Women Doctors Trained in Imperial Japan, Texts: Zhang Xueqin, “About Myself” (1925); “Discussing Medical Equipment on the Home Front in Light of Martyr Liang’s Death” (1937); “Impressions of A Woman Doctor Returning to China after Studying in Japan” (1937) 6. Critique: Carving Space: Women Physicians in Colonial Korea, Text: “A Roundtable with Women Physicians” (1934) 7. Critique: Navigating Gender and Medicine: A Comparative Study of Female Doctors in Colonial Taiwan, Text: “An Interview with Shi Man” (1994) 8. Critique: Nursing War: Military, Medicine, and the Question of Femininity, Text: Fujimura Chiyo, A Military Nurse (1994) 9. Critique: Providing Care on the Militarized Islands: Nursing Activities in Wartime Okinawa, Text: Gushi Yae, “District Nurse Activities Amidst the War” (1986) 10. Critique: Saving the Lives of Settlers: District Nurses and Rural Healthcare in Hokkaido, Text: Maki Tetsuo, ed., The Spirit of Compassion: Diaries of District Nurses in Hokkaido (1942)

Hiro Fujimoto is Assistant Professor at the Heidelberg Centre for Transcultural Studies, Heidelberg University, Germany. He works on the history of medicine in modern Japan from global and gender perspectives. He wrote several articles in Japanese and English, including “Women, Missionaries, and Medical Professions” (Japan Forum, 2020). Aya Homei is Reader in Japanese Studies at the University of Manchester, United Kingdom. She researches the history of medicine and science in modern Japan, focusing on population and reproduction. Her recent publications include Science for Governing Japan’s Population (2023). Ellen Gardner Nakamura is Senior Lecturer in Asian Studies at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. She specializes in the social history of medicine in nineteenth-century Japan. Her most recent monograph is Japanese Medical Lives in Transformation: Contesting Modernity in the Late Nineteenth Century (2025).

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