ABSTRACT

Science, technology, and medicine all contributed to the emerging modern Japanese empire and conditioned key elements of post-war development. As the only emerging non-Western country that was a colonial power in its own right, Japan utilized these fields not only to define itself as racially different from other Asian countries and thus justify its imperialist activities, but also to position itself within the civilized and enlightened world with the advantages of modern science, technologies, and medicine.

This book explores the ways in which scientists, engineers and physicians worked directly and indirectly to support the creation of a new Japanese empire, focussing on the eve of World War I and linking their efforts to later post-war developments. By claiming status as a modern, internationally-engaged country, the Japanese government was faced with having to control pathogens that might otherwise not have threatened the nation. Through the use of traditional and innovative techniques, this volume shows how the government was able to fulfil the state’s responsibility to protect society to varying degrees.

Chapter 14 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license. 

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|17 pages

Academia–industry relations

Interpreting the role of Nagai Nagayoshi in the development of new businesses in the Meiji period and beyond

chapter 3|12 pages

An emperor's chemist in war and peace

Sakurai Jōji during the Russo-Japanese War and World War I

chapter 4|17 pages

Buddhism contra cholera

How the Meiji state recruited religion against epidemic disease

chapter 7|13 pages

A colony or a sanitarium?

A comparative history of segregation politics of Hansen's disease in modern Japan

chapter 8|18 pages

“They are not human”

Hansen's disease and medical responses to Hōjō Tamio 1

chapter 9|16 pages

Dr. Baelz's Mongolian spot

German medicine, discourse of race in Meiji Japan, and the local response

chapter 10|11 pages

When precision obscures

Disease categories related to cholera during the Sino-Japanese War (1894–1895)

chapter 11|18 pages

Kampō in wartime Sino-Japanese relations

The Association of East Asian Medicine and the search for a tripartite medical partnership

chapter 13|16 pages

Architects of ABC weapons for the Japanese empire

Microbiologists and theoretical physicists

chapter |14 pages

Afterword

Is there anything unique about modern Japanese science?