"Medicine of the Grassroots": Korean Herbal Medicine Industry and Consumption during the Japanese Colonial Period.

IF 0.1 4区 哲学 0 ASIAN STUDIES Korean Journal of Medical History Pub Date : 2020-04-01 DOI:10.13081/kjmh.2020.29.215
Yong-Yuan Huang
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

There is no doubt that the colonial period was a critical time for the establishment and expansion of modern Western medicine in Korea. However, did this act as a catalyst for the overall decline of traditional Korean medicine? While previous studies mainly focus on research based on the concept of Uisaeng (traditional Korean medicine doctor) and the medical policies implemented by the Japanese Government-General of Korea, this paper begins with the Korean herbal medicine industry, and comprehensively investigates the distribution and consumption of Korean herbal medicines during the colonial period from three perspectives: the policies for Korean medicine merchants implemented by the Japanese Government-General of Korea, changes in the Korean herbal medicine industry, and consumption of Korean herbal medicines in the Korean society. The colonial authorities' intention was to foster the advancement of Western medicine and phase out traditional Korean medicine. However, they merely imposed limitations on Uisaengs' operations-this policy loophole objectively left a window for Korean medicine merchants. Moreover, against the backdrop of the growing popularity of Western medicine and restrictions on the development of traditional Korean medicine by colonial authorities, the Korean herbal medicine industry, as one of the few "national industries" dominated by and serving Koreans, showed its tenacious vitality during that time. Korean medicine merchants responded to market changes with ease. They built different drugstores, such as traditional herbal stores mainly selling traditional Korean medicines, hybrid drugstores that simultaneously dealt with the manufacture and sale of patent medicines, and ginseng drugstores that specialized in the ginseng business. This classification promoted the commercialization of traditional Korean herbal medicine. Another crucial condition for the vitality of the Korean herbal medicine industry is Koreans' preference for traditional Korean medicine. It is an indisputable fact that Western medicine gradually became popular and was recognized by the common man during the colonial period; nonetheless, Eastern medicine and Western medicine were not playing a zero-sum game. Through comprehensive macro and micro analysis, this paper demonstrates that, during the colonial period, when old and new ideas interacted, most Koreans, including upper-class elites and intellectuals who were open-minded about emerging concepts and options and had ample opportunities to avail western medical treatment, preferred traditional Korean medicine. Using Korean herbal medicines for illnesses remained the primary choice, While Western medicine assumed the role of a supplement to traditional treatment. This paper argues that the first reason for this phenomenon is the inertia of tradition, and the second is that Western medicine was not necessarily more effective than Korean herbal medicine at that time. Specifically, it can be considered that, during the colonial period, the growing popularity of Western medicine failed to bring about a radical change in Koreans' regular medical interventions. Simultaneously, the Korean herbal medicine industry, one of the pillars offering medical support to the common man, adapted suitably while relying on the inertia of its own tradition. The industry's vitality and dynamism during the colonial period certainly underscore the need to amend the one-sided narrative of medical modernization vis-à-vis Western medicine.

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“草根医药”:日治时期韩国草药产业与消费。
毫无疑问,殖民时期是现代西方医学在韩国建立和发展的关键时期。然而,这是否成为韩国传统医学全面衰落的催化剂?虽然以往的研究主要集中在基于韩国传统医生Uisaeng的概念和韩国日本政府将军实施的医疗政策的研究,并从日本政府对朝鲜商人的政策、朝鲜草药产业的变化以及朝鲜社会对朝鲜草药的消费三个角度,全面考察了殖民时期朝鲜草药的分布和消费情况。殖民当局的意图是促进西方医学的发展,逐步淘汰传统的韩国医学。然而,他们只是对Uisaengs的经营施加了限制——这一政策漏洞客观上为韩国医药商人留下了一个窗口。此外,在西方医学日益普及和殖民当局限制韩国传统医学发展的背景下,韩国草药行业作为少数由韩国人主导和服务的“民族产业”之一,在那段时间里展现出了顽强的生命力。韩国医药商人对市场变化反应自如。他们建立了不同的药店,如主要销售韩国传统药物的传统草药店、同时经营中成药生产和销售的混合药店,以及专门从事人参业务的人参药店。这种分类促进了韩国传统草药的商业化。韩国草药产业活力的另一个关键条件是韩国人对传统韩国医药的偏好。不争的事实是,在殖民地时期,西医逐渐流行起来,并得到了普通人的认可;尽管如此,东方医学和西方医学并不是在玩零和游戏。通过全面的宏观和微观分析,本文表明,在殖民时期,新旧思想相互影响的时期,大多数韩国人,包括对新兴概念和选择持开放态度并有充分机会接受西方医疗的上层精英和知识分子,更喜欢韩国传统医学。使用韩国草药治疗疾病仍然是主要选择,而西药则扮演着传统治疗的补充角色。本文认为,造成这种现象的第一个原因是传统的惰性,第二个原因是当时西方医学并不一定比韩国草药更有效。具体而言,可以认为,在殖民时期,西方医学的日益普及未能使韩国人的常规医疗干预措施发生根本性变化。与此同时,韩国草药行业作为为普通人提供医疗支持的支柱之一,在依靠自身传统惯性的同时,也进行了适当的调整。该行业在殖民时期的活力和活力无疑强调了修正医学现代化相对于西方医学的片面叙事的必要性。
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发文量
11
审稿时长
8 weeks
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