Eugenics, environment, and acclimatizing to Manchukuo: psychiatric studies of Japanese colonists.

Janice Matsumura
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Abstract

Both the advocates and critics of what has been called "the new imperial history," which may be characterized by its focus on how colonies were not simply influenced by but also exercised an influence on a dominating foreign state, have inspired this article. The article addresses the production and dissemination of medical knowledge in its examination of psychiatric research conducted in the 1930s in Japan's unofficial colony of Manchukuo. It highlights the political dimension of studies of psychosomatic disorders, syphilis, and alcoholism among colonists by placing it in the context of contending theories of racial improvement and growing official support for mass migration, especially to northeast China. Moreover, it inquires into restrictions on the flow of ideas from the colonies by examining how these studies were received in Japan. While interest in the colonies ensured that psychiatrists in Manchukuo were able to publish their research in leading Japanese medical journals, their findings jeopardized too many political and professional interests to become more public. In much-publicized debates stimulated by the impeding establishment of eugenic sterilization legislation, their colleagues in Japan in the late 1930s who championed the argument of environment over heredity were conspicuously silent about conditions among Japanese colonists, using instead examples of European and North American colonists to make their case.

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优生学、环境与适应满洲国:日本殖民者的精神病学研究。
所谓“新帝国史”的支持者和批评者都启发了这篇文章。“新帝国史”的特点可能是,它关注殖民地如何不仅受到外国统治的影响,而且还对其施加影响。这篇文章通过对20世纪30年代在日本非官方殖民地满洲国进行的精神病学研究的考察,论述了医学知识的生产和传播。它强调了殖民者心身疾病、梅毒和酗酒研究的政治维度,将其置于种族改善理论的争论和官方对大规模移民(特别是向中国东北移民)日益增长的支持的背景下。此外,它还通过研究这些研究在日本的接受情况,探讨了殖民地思想流动的限制。虽然对殖民地的兴趣确保了满洲国的精神科医生能够在日本主要医学期刊上发表他们的研究,但他们的发现损害了太多的政治和专业利益,无法变得更加公开。在优生绝育立法受到阻碍而引发的广泛争论中,他们在日本的同事在20世纪30年代末支持环境优于遗传的观点,但他们对日本殖民者的状况却明显保持沉默,而是用欧洲和北美殖民者的例子来证明自己的观点。
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