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Diplomatic Journeys and Medical Brush Talks: Eighteenth-Century Dialogues Between Korean and Japanese Medicine

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Motion and Knowledge in the Changing Early Modern World

Part of the book series: Studies in History and Philosophy of Science ((AUST,volume 30))

Abstract

During the Tokugawa period (1603–1868), Japanese doctors generally learned about the medical ideas of their counterparts elsewhere in East Asia only through the medium of imported books, and there were few circumstances under which they could meet directly with foreigners. The journeys of Korean doctors who travelled to Edo in the entourage of Korean diplomatic embassies thus presented an unusual opportunity to discuss medical topics with doctors from outside Japan who were intimately familiar with traditional forms of East Asian medicine. Japanese doctors hoped to learn from the visiting Koreans about topics ranging from their interpretations of the Chinese medical classics to their methods of processing valuable drugs such as ginseng. However, a divergence between Japanese and Korean medical cultures over the course of the eighteenth century meant that both sides experienced increasing frustration in their attempts to engage in dialogue.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    The medical brush talks have recently attracted the interest of a number of Korean historians, who have built on the foundations laid by earlier Japanese historians (e.g. Miki 1962, 311–318; Yoshida 1988), comparing the medical brush talks with dialogues on Confucian scholarship (Kim 2008a, b) and examining their significance as a publishing phenomenon (Hǒ 2010).

  2. 2.

    These disease categories were later assimilated to the Western disease category of tuberculosis (Johnston 1995).

  3. 3.

    The development of quasi-nationalistic pride in the achievements of Ancient Medicine paralleled the slightly earlier development of pride in the scholarly and literary achievements of Itō Jinsai, Ogyū Sorai, Dazai Shundai and Hattori Nankaku, but with slightly different chronology. Ogyū Sorai’s popularity within Japan was at its peak around the time of the 1748 embassy, when his style of scholarship featured prominently both in the brush talk conversations themselves and in the prefaces to the published versions. By contrast, Ancient Medicine was in 1748 still at an early stage of its emergence as an important phenomenon, and did not begin to feature prominently in the brush talks 1764. For further discussion of this parallel, see Kim (2008a).

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Trambaiolo, D. (2014). Diplomatic Journeys and Medical Brush Talks: Eighteenth-Century Dialogues Between Korean and Japanese Medicine. In: Gal, O., Zheng, Y. (eds) Motion and Knowledge in the Changing Early Modern World. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, vol 30. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7383-7_6

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