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ELLEN GARDNER NAKAMURA, Physicians and Famine in Japan: Takano Chōei in the 1830s, Social History of Medicine, Volume 13, Issue 3, December 2000, Pages 429–445, https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/13.3.429
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SUMMARY
Takano Chōei (1804–50) was a rangakusha: a scholar of Dutch learning, and a physician of Western medicine. Although he was one of the foremost scholars in his field, his career was cut off in its prime when he became the victim of an intrigue in 1839. As a result, much of his early work has been overshadowed by the political events that followed. This article takes a different approach to the writing of Chōei's history by presenting an example of his work as a physician in the period before his arrest. It examines the responses of Chōei and his colleagues to the famine and pestilence which ravaged the population during the Tempō Famine of the 1830s. The study is based on two short articles: one concerns the precautions people should take against epidemic disease, while the other deals with hardy, rapidly maturing crops thought helpful in warding off starvation. The focus of this article is on the way knowledge from Western sources was ‘received’; that is, how it was actively assimilated and transformed, through a process of cultural exchange.