samedi 23 avril 2022

Les femmes et la médecine dans l'empire japonais

Women and Medicine in the Japanese Empire

The 4th Virtual Workshop


April 30, 2022 (Japan Standard Time)

Organizers: Hiro Fujimoto (Kyoto University/JSPS)/Ellen Nakamura (The University of Auckland)

Registration deadline: April 28, 2022

Speakers

Ellen Nakamura (University of Auckland)
“The Greater Japan Women’s Hygiene Society as Public Space”

Isaac C.K. Tan (Columbia University)
“Hirose Kikuko and Her Typhi-Contaminated Buns: A Case of Resisting Gender and Legal Institutions in Wartime Japan”

Commentator: Reut Harari (Tel Aviv University)

We are pleased to invite participants in the fourth of a series of virtual workshops on the theme of “Women and Medicine in the Japanese Empire.” The aim is to develop an international research network on the history of women and medicine/healthcare in Japan and open up the possibility for future collaboration and publication. We hope that an edited volume will eventuate from the workshops. There is still scope to include interested scholars and graduate students in future workshops.
About the workshop

The last few decades has witnessed a growing body of scholarship on women in Japanese history. From the early twentieth century, women worked in a greater variety of roles and more and more women sought working opportunities outside the home. The jobs of shokugyō fujin (working women) ranged from teachers, typists, office workers, switchboard operators to physicians, nurses, and pharmacists. Women’s presence in the healthcare field was not small, though scholars have scarcely begun to examine how these medical women contributed to people's health. As has been highlighted by the recent COVID-19 crisis and the news of sexist policies regarding admission to medical school, there is still much to be learned about the situations and struggles of women working on the frontlines of the health system, let alone in its quieter corners and peripheries.

Women doctors in Japan have received much less attention than their counterparts in other countries, or even in comparison to Japanese nurses. However, the medical profession attracted women across the expanse of the colonial empire. Several Japanese women crossed the Pacific Ocean to receive medical training before 1900. After the establishment of Tokyo Women’s Medical School in the same year, numbers of Asian women came to Japan from the colonies where medical education for women was still limited. Thus, the history of these women doctors gives us a glimpse into the complicated relationship between gender, health, and colonialism in Japan.  

Workshop Format

Virtual (via Zoom)


Registration (free)

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScTEpMCNjVfRZIQtlx2NaIpbKP2Ikw3MnbOxfewaOQRlHuuVQ/viewform
​Please register by April 28. The organizers will send a Zoom link to the registered e-mail address by April 29.


Contact

Hiro Fujimoto, Ph.D.
Postdoctoral Fellow at Kyoto University/Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)
hiro.fujimoto.n[at]gmail.com

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