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2003 Fiscal Year Final Research Report Summary

Childbirth and Women's Bodies from the view point of a Female Doctor's Medical Documents-In the Context of Modernity

Research Project

Project/Area Number 13837041
Research Category

Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

Allocation TypeSingle-year Grants
Section一般
Research Field ジェンダー
Research InstitutionJUNSEI JUNIOR COLLEGE

Principal Investigator

SAWAYAMA Mikako  Junsei Junior College, Professor, 幼児教育科, 教授 (10154155)

Project Period (FY) 2001 – 2003
Keywordsa female doctor / medical documents / women's bodies / childbirth / Tokugawa period / Meiji period
Research Abstract

In this research I examine the women's bodies and childbirth by exploring the life of a female doctor (Joi), Tamae Kogo and her medical documents. It is my intention to relate the changes in childbirth and women's bodies within a local society in the late 1800's and 1900's the medical documents and letters written by Tamae Kogo, who practiced in villages in Tsuyama for over 47years beginning in 1857.
In Japan, women's bodies were viewed as birthing bodies in the Tokugawa period. During the nineteenth century in Japan, women's bodies and their reproductive lives became increasingly subject to state surveillance from pregnancy through childbirth. State supervision of women's reproductive practices was not an innovation of the Meiji government ; during the Tokugawa period, state authorities had attempted to control abortion and infanticide.
Soon after its establishment, the Meiji government adopted the policy of trying to increase the population in order to build up the wealth and military power of the nation. This led the government to attempt to rapidly modernize the practice of obstetrics. In 1868, the first year of the Meiji period, the new government condemned the selling of medicine (i.e., abortifacients) and the practice of abortion by any midwife. What was new and effective was that the Meiji state mobilized medical professionals, particularly midwives who had received European-style training and who worked under the Meiji governments licensing system. The nationwide childbirth reforms carried out by such licensed midwives gradually abolished many customs between the Tokugawa period and the 1900's. Althoug Tamae Kogo had to follow national policy, she worked within her societies and played a significant role in the local community. She was close to the local inhabitants and closely associated with the women's bodies and childbirth.

  • Research Products

    (1 results)

All Other

All Publications (1 results)

  • [Publications] 沢山美果子: "在村医の診察記録が語る女性の身体(叢書・比較教育社会史 身体と医療の教育社会史)"昭和堂(所収). 36 (2003)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より

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Published: 2005-04-19  

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