Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T16:34:54.204Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Visualizing the Geography of the Diseases of China: Western Disease Maps from Analytical Tools to Tools of Empire, Sovereignty, and Public Health Propaganda, 1878–1929

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2017

Marta Hanson*
Affiliation:
Johns Hopkins University E-mail: [email protected]

Argument

This article analyzes for the first time the earliest western maps of diseases in China spanning fifty years from the late 1870s to the end of the 1920s. The 24 featured disease maps present a visual history of the major transformations in modern medicine from medical geography to laboratory medicine wrought on Chinese soil. These medical transformations occurred within new political formations from the Qing dynasty (1644–1911) to colonialism in East Asia (Hong Kong, Taiwan, Manchuria, Korea) and hypercolonialism within China (Tianjin, Shanghai, Amoy) as well as the new Republican Chinese nation state (1912–49). As a subgenre of persuasive graphics, physicians marshaled disease maps for various rhetorical functions within these different political contexts. Disease maps in China changed from being mostly analytical tools to functioning as tools of empire, national sovereignty, and public health propaganda legitimating new medical concepts, public health interventions, and political structures governing over human and non-human populations.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References

Fairbank, John King, et al., eds. 1975. The I.G. in Peking: Letters of Robert Hart, Chinese Maritime Customs, 1868–1907. Cambridge MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Gordon, Charles Alexander. 1884. An Epitome of the Reports of the Medical Officers to the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs Service, from 1871 to 1882: With Chapters on the History of Medicine in China; Materia Medica; Epidemics; Famine; Ethnology; and Chronology in Relation to Medicine and Public Health. London: Bailliere.Google Scholar
Hart, Robert. 1871. “Inspector General's Circular No. 19 of 1870.” Customs Gazette No. X April-June, 1871, Part VI, Medical Reports for the Half Year Ended 31st March 1871:112-13.Google Scholar
Jamieson, Alexander. 1871. “Response to dispatch No. 6 A (Returns Series) of the 24th June 1871.” Customs Gazette No. XI July-September, 1871, Part VI, Medical Reports for the half year ended 30th September, 1871 Special Series: No. 2: 3.Google Scholar
Jamieson, Alexander.1872a. “Dr. Alexander Jamieson's Report on the Health of Shanghai for the half year ended 31st March 1872,” Customs Gazette, No. XIII. January-March, 1872, Part VI, Medical Reports for the Half Year Ended 31st March 1872, Special Series: No. 3: 77–86.Google Scholar
Jamieson, Alexander. 1872b. “Dr. Alexander Jamieson's Report on the Health of Shanghai for the Half Year Ended 30th September 1872,” Customs Gazette, July-September, 1872, Part VI, Medical Reports for the Half Year Ended 30th September 1872, Special Series No. 4: 92–105.Google Scholar
Jefferys, W. Hamilton. 1928. The Diseases of China, Including Formosa and Korea. Second Edition. Shanghai: A.B.C. Press.Google Scholar
Jefferys, W. Hamilton, and Maxwell, James L.. 1910. The Diseases of China, including Formosa and Korea. Philadelphia: P. Blakiston's Son & Co.Google Scholar
Kanto totokufu rinji borekibu 關東都督府臨時防疫部 [Guandong temporary municipal sanitation bureau] 1912. Meiji yonju-sen yonen minami Manshu, pesto ryuko shi furoku 明治四十三四年南滿洲 ‘ペスト’流行誌 [An Account of the Plague in Southern Manchuria, 1910-1911]. Volume 2. Dairen: Manshu hibishinbunsha.Google Scholar
Shibasaburo, Kitasato, Takaki, T., Shiga, K., Moriya, G.. [1900] 1977. “Bericht über Die Pestepidemie in Kobe und Osaka von November 1899 bis Januar 1900.” (“Records of the Plague Epidemics in Kobe and Osaka from November 1899 to January 1900”), 256–326, in Collected Papers of Shibasaburo Kitasato. Tokyo: Kitasato Institute, Kitasato University.Google Scholar
Manson, Patrick. 1878. “Notes on the Plague in Yunnan,” in China Imperial Maritime Customs II. Special Series: No. 2. “Dr. Manson's Report on the Health of Amoy for the Half-year ended 31st March 1878,” pp. 25–7.Google Scholar
Matignon, Jean-Jacques. 1898a. “La Peste Bubonique en Mongolie.” Manuscript, Institut Pasteur Archives, Paris.Google Scholar
Matignon, Jean-Jacques. 1898b. “La Peste Bubonique en Mongolie,” in China Imperial Maritime Customs, II. Special Series: No. 2. Medical Reports for the Half-Year ended 30th September 1898, 58th Issue, pp. 1–19.Google Scholar
Nagayo, Sensai 長與 專齋, 1877. Report of the Director of the Central Sanitary Bureau to His Excellency, the Minister of the Home Department of the Choleraic Diseases in Japan, in the 10th Year of Meiji (1877). Central Sanitary Bureau, Home Department.Google Scholar
Nagayo, Sensai 長與 專齋, 1879. Report of the Director of the Central Sanitary Bureau to His Excellency, the Minister of the Home Department of the Choleraic Diseases in Japan, in the 12th Year of Meiji (1879), 1–68. Central Sanitary Bureau, Home Department.Google Scholar
Nagayo, Sensai 長與 專齋, 1885. A Brief Review of the Operations of the Home Department in connection with the Cholera Epidemic of the 18th Year of Meiji. Tokyo: Sanitary Bureau, Home Department 内務省衛生局.Google Scholar
Nagayo, Sensai 長與 專齋, 1886. A Brief Review of the Operations of the Home Department in connection with the Cholera Epidemic of the 18th Year of Meiji. Tokyo: Sanitary Bureau, Home Department 内務省衛生局.Google Scholar
Ogata, Masanori. 1897a. “Uber die Pestepidemie in Formosa” (“On the Plague Epidemic in Formosa”). Zentralblatt für Bakteriologie, Parasitenkunde und Infektionskrankheiten (Central Papers for Bacteriology,Parasites and Infectious Diseases) 21: 769777.Google Scholar
Ogata, Masanori 緒方正規. 1897b. “Pesuto-byō kenkyū fukumei-sho” ペスト病研究復命書 (“Plague Disease Research Report,” 6-8. Tokyo: 拓殖務大臣官房文書課 (Tsutomu Takushoku Minister's Secretariat Document Division).Google Scholar
Ogata, Masanori 緒方正規. 1897c. “Ogata hakase pesuto-byō chō cha hōkoku” 緒方博士ペスト病調查報告 (“Dr. Ogata Plague Disease Examination Report”), 109124. Meiji 29 toshi Taiwan pesuto ryūkō kiji 明治二十九年台灣ペスト流行記事 (Record of the Meiji 29 [1897]Spread of Plague in Taiwan). Taiwan: 台灣總督府民政部衛生課 (Taiwanese Government People's Government, Department of Hygiene).Google Scholar
Rocher, Émile. 1879. La Province Chinoise du Yün-nan (The Chinese Province of Yunnan). Paris: E. Leroux.Google Scholar
Royal College of Physicians. 1869. The Nomenclature of Diseases. London: Printed for the Royal College of Physicians by Spottiswoode & Co.Google Scholar
Simmons, Duane B. 1879. “Cholera epidemics in Japan,” China Imperial Maritime Customs, II. Special Series: No. 2. Medical Reports for the Half-Year ended 30th September 1879, 18th Issue, pp. 9–30.Google Scholar
Simmons, Duane B. 1880. “Beriberi, or the ‘Kakké’ of Japan,” China Imperial Maritime Customs, II. Special Series: No. 2. Medical Reports for the Half-Year ended 31st March 1880, 19th Issue, pp. 9–30.Google Scholar
Simpson, William John Ritchie. 1903. Report on the Causes and Continuance of Plague in Hong Kong and Suggestions as to Remedial Measures. London: Waterlow and Sons.Google Scholar
Stanley, Arthur. 1909. Shanghai Municipal Council. Health Department. Annual Report 1908. Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1909), SMA, U1/16/4651 in Shanghai danganguan (Shanghai archives). For map “Distribution of Plague Rats, December 8th to 31st, 1908.”Google Scholar
Stanley, Arthur. 1910. Shanghai Municipal Council. Health Department. Annual Report 1908. Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1909), SMA in Shanghai danganguan (Shanghai archives). For map “Distribution of Plague, 1910.”Google Scholar
Stanley, Arthur. 1911. Shanghai Municipal Council. Health Department. Annual Report 1908. Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1909), SMA in Shanghai danganguan (Shanghai archives). For map “Distribution of Plague, 1911.”Google Scholar
Stanley, Arthur. 1914. Shanghai Municipal Council. Health Department. Annual Report 1908. Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1909), SMA in Shanghai danganguan (Shanghai archives). For map “Distribution of Plague, 1914.”Google Scholar
Wong, K. Chimin, and Lien-teh, Wu. 1936. History of Chinese Medicine, Being a Chronicle of Medical Happenings in China from Ancient Times to the Present Period. Shanghai: National Quarantine Service.Google Scholar
Lien-teh, Wu, ed. 1936a. Manchurian Plague Prevention Service Memorial Volume: 1912–1932. Shanghai: National Quarantine Service.Google Scholar
Lien-teh, Wu. 1936b. Plague: A Manual for Medical and Public Health Workers. Shanghai: Weishengshu National Quarantine Service.Google Scholar
Lien-teh, Wu. 1959. Plague Fighter: The Autobiography of a Modern Chinese Physician. Cambridge: W. Heffer.Google Scholar
Fairbank, John King, et al., eds. 1975. The I.G. in Peking: Letters of Robert Hart, Chinese Maritime Customs, 1868–1907. Cambridge MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Gordon, Charles Alexander. 1884. An Epitome of the Reports of the Medical Officers to the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs Service, from 1871 to 1882: With Chapters on the History of Medicine in China; Materia Medica; Epidemics; Famine; Ethnology; and Chronology in Relation to Medicine and Public Health. London: Bailliere.Google Scholar
Hart, Robert. 1871. “Inspector General's Circular No. 19 of 1870.” Customs Gazette No. X April-June, 1871, Part VI, Medical Reports for the Half Year Ended 31st March 1871:112-13.Google Scholar
Jamieson, Alexander. 1871. “Response to dispatch No. 6 A (Returns Series) of the 24th June 1871.” Customs Gazette No. XI July-September, 1871, Part VI, Medical Reports for the half year ended 30th September, 1871 Special Series: No. 2: 3.Google Scholar
Jamieson, Alexander.1872a. “Dr. Alexander Jamieson's Report on the Health of Shanghai for the half year ended 31st March 1872,” Customs Gazette, No. XIII. January-March, 1872, Part VI, Medical Reports for the Half Year Ended 31st March 1872, Special Series: No. 3: 77–86.Google Scholar
Jamieson, Alexander. 1872b. “Dr. Alexander Jamieson's Report on the Health of Shanghai for the Half Year Ended 30th September 1872,” Customs Gazette, July-September, 1872, Part VI, Medical Reports for the Half Year Ended 30th September 1872, Special Series No. 4: 92–105.Google Scholar
Jefferys, W. Hamilton. 1928. The Diseases of China, Including Formosa and Korea. Second Edition. Shanghai: A.B.C. Press.Google Scholar
Jefferys, W. Hamilton, and Maxwell, James L.. 1910. The Diseases of China, including Formosa and Korea. Philadelphia: P. Blakiston's Son & Co.Google Scholar
Kanto totokufu rinji borekibu 關東都督府臨時防疫部 [Guandong temporary municipal sanitation bureau] 1912. Meiji yonju-sen yonen minami Manshu, pesto ryuko shi furoku 明治四十三四年南滿洲 ‘ペスト’流行誌 [An Account of the Plague in Southern Manchuria, 1910-1911]. Volume 2. Dairen: Manshu hibishinbunsha.Google Scholar
Shibasaburo, Kitasato, Takaki, T., Shiga, K., Moriya, G.. [1900] 1977. “Bericht über Die Pestepidemie in Kobe und Osaka von November 1899 bis Januar 1900.” (“Records of the Plague Epidemics in Kobe and Osaka from November 1899 to January 1900”), 256–326, in Collected Papers of Shibasaburo Kitasato. Tokyo: Kitasato Institute, Kitasato University.Google Scholar
Manson, Patrick. 1878. “Notes on the Plague in Yunnan,” in China Imperial Maritime Customs II. Special Series: No. 2. “Dr. Manson's Report on the Health of Amoy for the Half-year ended 31st March 1878,” pp. 25–7.Google Scholar
Matignon, Jean-Jacques. 1898a. “La Peste Bubonique en Mongolie.” Manuscript, Institut Pasteur Archives, Paris.Google Scholar
Matignon, Jean-Jacques. 1898b. “La Peste Bubonique en Mongolie,” in China Imperial Maritime Customs, II. Special Series: No. 2. Medical Reports for the Half-Year ended 30th September 1898, 58th Issue, pp. 1–19.Google Scholar
Nagayo, Sensai 長與 專齋, 1877. Report of the Director of the Central Sanitary Bureau to His Excellency, the Minister of the Home Department of the Choleraic Diseases in Japan, in the 10th Year of Meiji (1877). Central Sanitary Bureau, Home Department.Google Scholar
Nagayo, Sensai 長與 專齋, 1879. Report of the Director of the Central Sanitary Bureau to His Excellency, the Minister of the Home Department of the Choleraic Diseases in Japan, in the 12th Year of Meiji (1879), 1–68. Central Sanitary Bureau, Home Department.Google Scholar
Nagayo, Sensai 長與 專齋, 1885. A Brief Review of the Operations of the Home Department in connection with the Cholera Epidemic of the 18th Year of Meiji. Tokyo: Sanitary Bureau, Home Department 内務省衛生局.Google Scholar
Nagayo, Sensai 長與 專齋, 1886. A Brief Review of the Operations of the Home Department in connection with the Cholera Epidemic of the 18th Year of Meiji. Tokyo: Sanitary Bureau, Home Department 内務省衛生局.Google Scholar
Ogata, Masanori. 1897a. “Uber die Pestepidemie in Formosa” (“On the Plague Epidemic in Formosa”). Zentralblatt für Bakteriologie, Parasitenkunde und Infektionskrankheiten (Central Papers for Bacteriology,Parasites and Infectious Diseases) 21: 769777.Google Scholar
Ogata, Masanori 緒方正規. 1897b. “Pesuto-byō kenkyū fukumei-sho” ペスト病研究復命書 (“Plague Disease Research Report,” 6-8. Tokyo: 拓殖務大臣官房文書課 (Tsutomu Takushoku Minister's Secretariat Document Division).Google Scholar
Ogata, Masanori 緒方正規. 1897c. “Ogata hakase pesuto-byō chō cha hōkoku” 緒方博士ペスト病調查報告 (“Dr. Ogata Plague Disease Examination Report”), 109124. Meiji 29 toshi Taiwan pesuto ryūkō kiji 明治二十九年台灣ペスト流行記事 (Record of the Meiji 29 [1897]Spread of Plague in Taiwan). Taiwan: 台灣總督府民政部衛生課 (Taiwanese Government People's Government, Department of Hygiene).Google Scholar
Rocher, Émile. 1879. La Province Chinoise du Yün-nan (The Chinese Province of Yunnan). Paris: E. Leroux.Google Scholar
Royal College of Physicians. 1869. The Nomenclature of Diseases. London: Printed for the Royal College of Physicians by Spottiswoode & Co.Google Scholar
Simmons, Duane B. 1879. “Cholera epidemics in Japan,” China Imperial Maritime Customs, II. Special Series: No. 2. Medical Reports for the Half-Year ended 30th September 1879, 18th Issue, pp. 9–30.Google Scholar
Simmons, Duane B. 1880. “Beriberi, or the ‘Kakké’ of Japan,” China Imperial Maritime Customs, II. Special Series: No. 2. Medical Reports for the Half-Year ended 31st March 1880, 19th Issue, pp. 9–30.Google Scholar
Simpson, William John Ritchie. 1903. Report on the Causes and Continuance of Plague in Hong Kong and Suggestions as to Remedial Measures. London: Waterlow and Sons.Google Scholar
Stanley, Arthur. 1909. Shanghai Municipal Council. Health Department. Annual Report 1908. Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1909), SMA, U1/16/4651 in Shanghai danganguan (Shanghai archives). For map “Distribution of Plague Rats, December 8th to 31st, 1908.”Google Scholar
Stanley, Arthur. 1910. Shanghai Municipal Council. Health Department. Annual Report 1908. Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1909), SMA in Shanghai danganguan (Shanghai archives). For map “Distribution of Plague, 1910.”Google Scholar
Stanley, Arthur. 1911. Shanghai Municipal Council. Health Department. Annual Report 1908. Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1909), SMA in Shanghai danganguan (Shanghai archives). For map “Distribution of Plague, 1911.”Google Scholar
Stanley, Arthur. 1914. Shanghai Municipal Council. Health Department. Annual Report 1908. Shanghai: Kelly & Walsh, 1909), SMA in Shanghai danganguan (Shanghai archives). For map “Distribution of Plague, 1914.”Google Scholar
Wong, K. Chimin, and Lien-teh, Wu. 1936. History of Chinese Medicine, Being a Chronicle of Medical Happenings in China from Ancient Times to the Present Period. Shanghai: National Quarantine Service.Google Scholar
Lien-teh, Wu, ed. 1936a. Manchurian Plague Prevention Service Memorial Volume: 1912–1932. Shanghai: National Quarantine Service.Google Scholar
Lien-teh, Wu. 1936b. Plague: A Manual for Medical and Public Health Workers. Shanghai: Weishengshu National Quarantine Service.Google Scholar
Lien-teh, Wu. 1959. Plague Fighter: The Autobiography of a Modern Chinese Physician. Cambridge: W. Heffer.Google Scholar

Secondary Sources

Anderson, Warwick. 2003. The Cultivation of Whiteness: Science, Health and Racial Destiny in Australia. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Anderson, Warwick. 2006. Colonial Pathologies: American Tropical Medicine, Race, and Hygiene in the Philippines. London: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Andrews, Bridie. 2014. The Making of Modern Chinese Medicine, 1850–1960. Vancouver: UBC Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrews, Bridie, and Bullock, Mary Brown, eds. 2014. Medical Transitions in Twentieth-Century China. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Arnold, David. 1993. Colonizing the Body: State Medicine and Epidemic Disease in Nineteenth-Century India. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Baker, R.A. (Sandy), and Bayliss, R.A.. 1987. “William John Ritchie Simpson (1855-1931): Public Health and Tropical Medicine.” Medical History 31:450–65.Google Scholar
Bay, Alexander. 2012. Beriberi in Modern Japan: The Making of a National Disease. Rochester NY: University of Rochester Press.Google Scholar
Benedict, Carol. 1996. Bubonic Plague in Nineteenth-Century China. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Bu, Liping, Stapleton, Darwin H., and Yip, Ka-che, eds. 2012. Science, Public Health and the State in Modern Asia. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bu, Liping and Yip, Ka-che, eds. 2012. Public Health and National Reconstruction in Post-War Asia International Influences, Local Transformations. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Cliff, Andrew, Haggett, Peter, and Smallman-Raynor, Matthew. 2004. World Atlas of Epidemic Diseases. London and New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Core, Rachel. 2013. “The Fall and Rise of Tuberculosis: A Study of How Institutional Change Affected Health Outcomes in Shanghai, 1928–2013.” Ph.D. diss., Johns Hopkins University.Google Scholar
Cosgrove, Denis. 2008. Geography and Vision: Seeing, Imagining, and Representing the World. International Library of Human Geography 12. London and New York: Palgrave Macmillian.Google Scholar
Croizier, Ralph. 1968. Traditional Medicine in Modern China: Science, Nationalism, and the Tensions of Cultural Change. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Elman, Benjamin. 2005. On Their Own Terms: Science in China, 1550–1900. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Elvin, Mark, and Ts'ui-jung, Liu, eds. 1998. Sediments of Time: Environment and Society in Chinese History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Eyler, John. 1979. Victorian Social Medicine: The Ideas and Methods of William Farr. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Fuess, Harald. 2014. “Informal Imperialism and the 1879 Hesperia Incident: Containing Cholera and Challenging Extraterritoriality in Japan.” Japan Review 27: 103–40.Google Scholar
Flohr, Carsten. 1996. “The Plague Fighter: Wu Lien-teh and the Beginning of the Chinese Public Health System.” Annals of Science 53:369–70.Google Scholar
Furth, Charlotte and Leung, Angela Ki Che, eds. 2010. Health and Hygiene in Chinese East Asia: Policies and Public in the Long Twentieth Century. Chapel Hill NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Gamsa, Mark. 2006. “The Epidemic of Pneumonic Plague in Manchuria.” Past & Present 190: 147184.Google Scholar
Gross, Miriam. 2016. Farewell to the God of Plague: Chairman Mao's Campaign to Deworm China. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Ham, Daniel. 2012. “The Management of Malaria and Leprosy in Hong Kong and the International Settlement of Shanghai, 1880s–1940s,” Unpublished PhD Thesis, Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hanson, Marta. 2011. Speaking of Epidemics in Chinese Medicine: Disease and the Geographic Imagination in Late Imperial China. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Harley, John Brian, and Woodward, David, et al., eds. 1994. The History of Cartography, Volume Two, Book Two, Cartography in the Traditional East and Southeast Asian Societies, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Harrison, Mark. 2012. Contagion: How Commerce Spread Disease. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Haynes, Douglas M. 2001. Imperial Medicine: Patrick Manson and the Conquest of Tropical Disease. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Headrick, Daniel R. 1981. The Tools of Empire: Technology and European Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Henry, Todd A. 2005. “Sanitizing Empire: Japanese Articulations of Korean Otherness and the Construction of Early Colonial Seoul, 1905–1919.” Journal of Asian Studies 64 (3):639–75.Google Scholar
Henry, Todd A. 2014. Assimilating Seoul: Japanese Rule and the Politics of Public Space in Colonial Korea, 1910–1945. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Steven. 2007. The Ghost Map: The Story of London's Most Terrifying Epidemic – and How it Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World. London: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Jones, Susan. 2011. “Hunting the Hant'a: Implications of Sylvatic Plague for Public Health.” Conference paper delivered 26 September 2011, at the workshop, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, Oxford University on “Re-Thinking the History of Health, Disease, and Medicine in Global Perspective.” [Can ask author for copy of paper via Research Gate].Google Scholar
Kim, Sonja. 2006. “The Search for Health: Translating Wisaeng and Medicine during the Taehan Empire.” In Reform and Modernity in the Taehuan Empire, edited by Dong-no, Kim, Duncan, John B., and Do-hyung, Kim, 299341. Seoul: Jimoondang.Google Scholar
Kim, Sonja. 2008a. “Contesting Bodies: Managing Population, Birthing, and Medicine in Korea, 1876–1945.” PhD diss., University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Kim, Sonja. 2008b. “‘Limiting Birth’: Birth Control in Colonial Korea.” East Asian Science, Technology, and Society: An International Journal 2 (3): 335–9.Google Scholar
Koch, Thomas. 2005. Cartographies of Disease: Maps, Mapping, and Medicine. Medlands, CA: ESRI Press.Google Scholar
Koch, Thomas. 2011. Disease Maps: Epidemics on the Ground. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Koch, Thomas. 2014. “1831: The Map that Launched the Idea of Global Health.” International Journal of Epidemiology, 1–7.Google Scholar
Lackner, Michael, Amelung, Iwo, and Kurtz, Joachim, eds. 2001. New Terms for New Ideas: Western Knowledge & Lexical Change in Late Imperial China. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Lam, Tong. 2011. A Passion for Facts: Social Surveys and the Construction of the Chinese Nation-State, 1900–1949. Asia Pacific Modern. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Latour, Bruno. 1987. Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers through Society. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Latour, Bruno. 1993. The Pasteurization of France. Translated by Alan Sheridan and John Law. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Lei, Sean Hsiang-lin. 2010. “Sovereignty and the Microscope: Constituting Notifiable Infectious Disease and Containing the Manchurian Plague 1910–11.” In Health & Hygiene in Chinese East Asia: Policies and Public in the Long Twentieth Century, edited by Leung, Angela and Furth, Charlotte, 73109. Chapel Hill NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Lei, Sean Hsiang-lin. 2014. Neither Donkey Nor Horse: Medicine in the Struggle Over China's Modernity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Lieu, Kai Khiun. 2009. “(Re)Claiming Sovereignty: The Manchuria Plague Prevention Services (1912–31).” In Uneasy Encounters: The Politics of Medicine and Health in China 1900–1937, edited by Borowy, Iris, 123–45. Frankfurt am Main/New York: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Liu, Shiyung. 2011a. Prescribing Colonization: The Role of Medical Practice and Policy in Japan-Ruled Taiwan. Ann Arbor: Association of Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Liu, Shiyung. 2011b. “An Overview of Public Health Development in Japan-ruled Taiwan.” In Death at the Opposite Ends of the Eurasian Continent: Mortality Trends in Taiwan and the Netherlands 1850–1945, edited by Engelen, Theo, 165182. Amsterdam: Aksant Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Liu, Shiyung. 2012. “From Japanese Colonial Medicine to American-Standard Medicine in Taiwan – A Case Study of the Transition in the Medical Profession and Practices in East Asia.” In Science, Public Health and the State in Modern Asia, edited by Liping, Bu et al., 162176. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Liu, Shiyung. 2012. “Disease, People, and Environment: The Plague in China.” Paper presented at The Ohio State University Center for Historical Research Program for 2011–2012, Health, Disease, and Environment in World History, April 2012. Unpublished paper. (Contact author for hardcopy).Google Scholar
Lo, Ming-Cheng M. 2002. Doctors within Borders: Profession, Ethnicity, and Modernity in Colonial Taiwan. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Luesink, David. 2012. “Dissecting Modernity: Anatomy and Power in the Language of Science in China.” PhD thesis, University of British Columbia.Google Scholar
Macpherson, Kerrie L. [1987] 2002. A Wilderness of Marshes: The Origins of Public Health in Shanghai, 1843–1893. Lanham MD: Lexington Books. Reprint Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Macpherson, Kerrie L. 1998. “Cholera in China, 1820–1930: An Aspect of the Internationalization of Infectious Disease.” In Sediments of Time, edited by Elvin, Mark and Tsui-jung, Liu, 487519. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
McLeod, Kari S. 2000. “Our Sense of Snow: The Myth of John Snow in Medical Geography.” Social Science and Medicine 50:923–35.Google Scholar
Monmonier, Mark. 2002. Spying with Maps: Surveillance Technologies and the Future of Privacy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Monmonier, Mark. 2010. “Maps as Graphic Propaganda for Public Health.” In Imagining Illness: Public Health and Visual Culture, edited by Serlin, David, 108125. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Nathan, Carl F. 1967. Plague Prevention and Politics in Manchuria 1910–1931. Cambridge: East Asian Research Center, Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Park, Jin-kyung. 2008. “Corporeal Colonialism: Medicine, Reproduction, and Race in Colonial Korea.” PhD diss., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.Google Scholar
Park, Jin-kyung. 2013. “Husband Murder as the ‘Sickness’ of Korea: Carceral Gynecology, Race, and Tradition in Colonial Korea, 1926–1932.” Journal of Women's History 25 (3):116–40.Google Scholar
Park, Jin-kyung. 2014a. “Picturing Empire and Illness: Biomedicine, Venereal Disease, and the Modern Girl in Korea under Japanese Colonial Rule.” Cultural Studies 28 (1):108–41.Google Scholar
Park, Jin-kyung. 2014b. “Bodies for Empire: Biopolitics, Reproduction, and Sexual Knowledge in Late Colonial Korea.” Korean Journal of Medical History 23:203–38.Google Scholar
Park, Jin-kyung. 2015. “Yellow Men's Burden: East Asian Imperialism, Forensic Medicine, and Conjugality in Colonial Korea.” Acta Koreana 18 (1):187207.Google Scholar
Park, Yunjae. 2005. “Anti-Cholera Measures by the Japanese Colonial Government and the Reaction of Koreans in the Early 1920s.” The Review of Korean Studies 8 (4):169–86.Google Scholar
Park, Yunjae. 2006. “Medical Policies toward Indigenous Medicine in Colonial Korea and India.” Korea Journal 46 (1):198224.Google Scholar
Park, Yunjae. 2010a. “Sanitizing Korea: Anti-Cholera Activities of the Police in Early Colonial Korea.” Seoul Journal of Korean Studies 23 (2):151–71.Google Scholar
Park, Yunjae. 2010b. “The 1927 Emetine Injection Incident in Colonial Korea and the Intervention.” Korea Journal 50 (1):160–77.Google Scholar
Peckham, Robert. 2016. Epidemics in Modern Asia. New Approaches to Asian History Series. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Pelling, Margaret. 1978. Cholera, Fever and English Medicine, 1825–1865. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Perrins, Robert John. 2005. “Doctors, Disease and Development: Engineering Colonial Public Health in Southern Manchuria, 1905–1931.” In Building a Modern Nation: Science, Technology and Medicine in Japan, edited by Low, Morris, 103132. London: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Perrins, Robert John. 2008. “From God, Emperor, and Science: Competing Visions of the Hospital in Manchuria, 1910–1945.” In From Western Medicine to Global Medicine: The Hospital Beyond the West, edited by Harrison, Mark, Jones, Margaret, and Sweet, Helen, 67107. London and New Delhi: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Pritzker, Sonja. 2014. Living Translation: Language and the Search for Resonance in U.S. Chinese Medicine. New York: Berghahn Books.Google Scholar
Rogaski, Ruth. 2004. Hygienic Modernity: Meanings of Health and Disease in Treaty-Port China. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Rogaski, Ruth. 2010. “Vampires in Plagueland: The Multiple Meanings of Weisheng in Manchuria.” In Health and Hygiene in Chinese East Asia: Policies and Public in the Long Twentieth Century, edited by Furth, Charlotte and Leung, Angela Ki Che, 132159. Chapel Hill NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Shah, Nayan. 2001. Contagious Divides: Epidemics and Race in San Francisco's Chinatown. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Shapiro, Hugh. 1998. “The Puzzle of Spermatorrhea in Republican China.” Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 6 (3):551596.Google Scholar
Shin, Dongwon. 2003. “Traditional Medicine under Japanese Rule after 1930s.” Ŭisahak (Korean Journal of Medical History) 12 (2): 110–28.Google Scholar
Smith, Hilary A. 2008a. “Foot Qi: History of a Chinese Disorder.” Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Smith, Hilary A. 2008b. “Understanding the jiaoqi Experience: The Medical Approach to Illness in Seventh-Century China.” Asia Major, Third Series, 21 (1): 273–92.Google Scholar
Summers, William C. 2012. The Great Manchurian Plague of 1910–1911: The Geopolitics of an Epidemic Disease. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Watt, John R. 2014. Saving Lives in Modern China: How Medical Reformers Built Modern Healthcare Systems amid War and Epidemics, 1928–1945. Leiden/Boston: Brill.Google Scholar
Wicentowski, Joseph Charles. 2010. “Policing Public Health in Modern Taiwan, 1895–1949.” Ph.D. diss., Harvard University.Google Scholar
Wu, Yi-Li. 2015. “Bodily Knowledge and Western Learning in Late Imperial China: The Case of Wang Shixiong (1808-68).” In Historical Epistemology and the Making of Modern Chinese Medicine, edited by Chiang, Howard, 80112. Manchester: University of Manchester Press.Google Scholar
Yip, Ka-che. 1995. Health and National Reconstruction in Nationalist China: The Development of Modern Health Services, 1928–1937. Ann Arbor: Association for Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Yip, Ka-che. 2009. Disease, Colonialism, and the State: Malaria in Modern East Asian History. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.Google Scholar
Yoo, Theodore Jun. 2008. The Politics of Gender in Colonial Korea: Education, Labor, and Health, 1910–1945. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Yoo, Theodore Jun. 2016. It's Madness: The Politics of Mental Health in Colonial Korea. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Zhan, Mei. 2009. Other-Worldly: Making Chinese Medicine through Transnational Frames. Durham and London: Duke University Press.Google Scholar