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NAKAMURA, ELLEN (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   176127


Kusumoto Ine (1827–1903): A Feminist Reappraisal / Nakamura, Ellen   Journal Article
Nakamura, Ellen Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Kusumoto Ine was one of the first women in Japan to practice Western medicine. As the daughter of Philipp Franz von Siebold, a naturalised Dutch physician who visited Japan in the early nineteenth century, and Kusumoto Taki, his Japanese concubine, Ine’s extraordinary life has captured the imaginations of novelists, dramatists and historians alike. For a long time, readers have turned to Yoshimura Akira’s 1978 novel Fuon Shiiboruto no Musume [Von Siebold’s daughter] as the most accessible and comprehensive rendition of her biography, with much of its historical detail accepted as fact, rather than fiction. In this article, I argue that despite the popularity of Yoshimura’s biographical novel, it is still possible and desirable to create alternative narratives of Ine’s life. In order to present a feminist narrative of Ine’s past, I propose to examine her as a filial daughter who – like many other Japanese women of her time – took action to empower herself as an individual, as well as to protect and ensure the survival of her family.
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ID:   084395


Working the siebold network: Kusumoto Ine and western learning in nineteenth-century Japan / Nakamura, Ellen   Journal Article
Nakamura, Ellen Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract This article takes a fresh look at the life and work of Kusumoto Ine (1827-1903), one of the first women in Japan to practise Western medicine. While Ine's life is well known, serious historical studies have been hampered by a lack of evidence, and romanticised versions of her biography have loomed large. The present study focuses on the networks of men with whom she shared her life. Not only do the writings of these men provide evidence about her activities, but they also show how she was welcomed into their male, medical world. Ine's remarkable career was possible only through the support of these scholarly networks and patrons. The significance of Ine's activities in the Edo era highlights the fact that she was foremost a rangaku practitioner, rather than a pioneer of modern Western medicine.
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