Knowledge, Power, and Women's Reproductive Health in Japan, 1690–1945, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018
Genders and Sexualities in History Series

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Language: English
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Knowledge, Power, and Women's Reproductive Health in Japan, 1690-1945
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This book analyzes how women?s bodies became a subject and object of modern bio-power by examining the history of women?s reproductive health in Japan between the seventeenth century and the mid-twentieth century. Yuki Terazawa combines Foucauldian theory and
feminist ideas with in-depth historical research. She argues that central to the rise of bio-power and the colonization of people by this power was modern scientific taxonomies that classify people into categories of gender, race, nationality, class, age, disability, and disease. While
discussions of the roles played by the modern state are of critical importance to this project, significant attention is also paid to the increasing influences of male obstetricians and the parts that trained midwives and public health nurses played in the dissemination of modern power
after the 1868 Meiji Restoration.
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. The Reproductive Body of the Goseihô School.- Chaper 3. Changing Perceptions of the Female Body: The Rise of the Kagawa School of Obstetrics.- Chapter 4. The State, Midwives, Expectant Mothers, and Childbirth Reforms from the Meiji through the Early Showa Period (1868-1930s).- Chapter 5. Women’s Health Reforms in Japan at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.- Chapter 6. Knowledge, Power, and New Maternal Health Policies (1918-1945).- Chapter 7. Epilogue.- Index

Yuki Terazawa is Associate Professor in History at Hofstra University, USA. She has previously published ‘Racializing Bodies through Science in Meiji Japan: The Rise of Race-Based Research in Gynecology’ in Morris Low (ed), Building a Modern Japan: Science, Technology, and Medicine in the Meiji Era and Beyond (Palgrave, 2005).
Traces the increasing power and control of the state and scientific and medical experts over women’s reproductive lives in Japan Provides a broad perspective on the history of reproduction, discussing the transition from the premodern to modern period Demonstrates how some women resisted and challenged the state and medical experts to manage and control their bodies