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Adulterated Intermediaries: Peddlers, Pharmacists, and the Patent Medicine Industry in Colonial Korea (1910–1945)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 September 2019

HOI-EUN KIM*
Affiliation:
Hoi-eun Kim is Associate Professor of History at Texas A&M University, where he teaches courses on modern Japan, modern Germany, and medicine and empire. The 2015 awardee of J. Worth Estes Prize of the American Association for the History of Medicine for his 2013 article on a Japanese anti-diarrheal drug, Kim is author of Doctors of Empire: Medical and Cultural Encounters between Imperial Germany and Meiji Japan (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2014). Department of History, Texas A&M University, MS 4236, Glasscock Building, College Station, Texas 77843-4236. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

In studying the patent medicine industry in colonial Korea (1910–1945), I pay attention to the inordinately large number of peddlers and small retailers—45,688 in 1935—who functioned as human intermediaries in the burgeoning medicinal market. By almost exclusively studying printed advertisements, previous scholars have depicted the patent medicine industry as the vanguard of modern marketing or as a willing partner in the commercial propagation of the hegemonic vision of the colonial biopower. Conscious of the severely limited reach of modern media in the colonial context, I argue instead that incentivized sales intermediaries were equally significant in the success of the patent medicine industry. But the significance and contributions of the peddlers to the patent medicine industry were double-edged—the peddlers helped the industry by facilitating physical dissemination of patent medicine to end consumers, but their constant use of deception and fraud tainted the reputation of the industry. The anticipated move toward stricter regulation, however, did not happen due to two interrelated factors—a nascent group of pharmacists trained in modern pharmacology had strong ties to the patent medicine industry and the lukewarm response from the colonial government put the brakes on any meaningful reform. Overall, by bringing to the fore the pivotal roles peddlers played, my article provides a more nuanced discussion of the marketing practices of the patent medicine industry, the nature of the emerging professional class of pharmacists, and the efficacy (or lack thereof) of the regulatory power of the colonial government.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2019. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Business History Conference. All rights reserved. 

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Footnotes

I presented an earlier version of this essay at a workshop held at the University of Hong Kong in June 2018 (“Sociotechnical Systems of Pharmacotherapy in Modern East Asia, 1800–2020”), where I received helpful comments from many colleagues. I am also thankful to the anonymous reviewers and Andrew Popp for useful suggestions. This work was supported by the Academy of Korean Studies Grant (AKS-2013-R76).

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