Military Medicine in East Asia: Histories of Instrumentalism, Resistance, and Agency

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES
W. Soon
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The diverse narratives of military medicine in wartime East Asia range from Dr. Robert Ko-sheng Lim (Kesheng Lin 林 可 勝 ) and his fellow Overseas Chinese medical personnel ’ s valiant effort in soliciting blood donations from reluctant Chinese soldiers in 1944, to the Unit 731 doctors ’ reprehensible human experimentation in Harbin in the 1940s. These stories are part of a larger narrative of military medical success, failures, opportunities, and realities in the context of the Second Sino-Japanese war that lasted between 1937 and 1945. Doctors, nurses, and medical personnel working under the demands of intense warfare also revealed stories of individual resiliency and personal transformation. Their experiences contributed to the history of state building, resource management, and medical reconstruction in twentieth-century East Asia. Nevertheless, it is critical to identify how existing narratives of military medicine were often shaped by the outcomes of wars and political revolutions, even as more recent scholars have successfully chal-lenged these narratives by focusing on the wide-ranging military medical practices, ideas, and personnel on the ground. This article argues that the
东亚军事医学:工具主义、抵抗和代理的历史
关于战时东亚军事医学的叙述多种多样,从1944年林高生医生(林克生饰)和他的海外华人医务人员勇敢地向不情愿的中国士兵征集献血,到20世纪40年代731部队医生在哈尔滨进行的应受谴责的人体实验。这些故事是1937年至1945年第二次中日战争背景下军事医学成功、失败、机遇和现实的更大叙述的一部分。在激烈的战争中工作的医生、护士和医务人员也揭示了个人的韧性和个人转变的故事。他们的经验对二十世纪东亚国家建设、资源管理和医疗重建的历史作出了贡献。然而,确定现有的军事医学叙述如何经常受到战争和政治革命结果的影响是至关重要的,即使最近的学者通过关注广泛的军事医学实践、思想和实地人员,成功地挑战了这些叙述。这篇文章认为
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
12.50%
发文量
44
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