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In A Medicated Empire, Timothy M. Yang explores the history of Japans pharmaceutical industry in the early twentieth century through a close account of Hoshi Pharmaceuticals, one of East Asias most influential drug companies from the late 1910s through the early 1950s. Focusing on Hoshis connections to Japans emerging nation-state and empire, and on the ways in which it embraced an ideology of modern medicine as a humanitarian endeavor for greater social good, Yang shows how the industry promoted a hygienic, middle-class culture that was part of Japans national development and imperial expansion. Yang makes clear that the companys fortunes had less to do with scientific breakthroughs and medical innovations than with Japans web of social, political, and economic relations. He lays bare Hoshis business strategies and its connections with politicians and bureaucrats, and he describes how public health authorities dismissed many of its products as placebos at best and poisons at worst. Hoshi, like other pharmaceutical companies of the time, depended on resources and markets opened up, often violently, through colonization. Combining global histories of business, medicine, and imperialism, A Medicated Empire shows how the development of the pharmaceutical industry simultaneously supported and subverted regimes of public health at home and abroad.
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