000 01897nam a22001457a 4500
999 _c514752
_d514752
008 201207b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _a Leung, Angela Ki Che
_921656
245 _aGlocalizing medicine in the canton–Hong Kong–macau region in late qing China
260 _aModern Asian Studies
300 _a54(4), Jul, 2020: p.1345-1366
520 _aThis article looks at how globalization in the nineteenth century was inextricably entangled with localization in the Canton–Hong Kong–Macau nexus on the southern fringe of China by tracing the growth of its unique medical culture. It explains the ‘glocalizing’ process by tracing the development of this medical culture, which consists of knowledge construction and institution building, in the context of highly volatile epidemiological conditions aggravated by increasingly heavy inter-regional trade and migration. It traces the dynamic circulation of people, materials, ideas, and practices in this southern edge of China, which was traditionally connected to southeast Asia and shared ecological backdrops that produced similar epidemiological experiences. The Canton nexus in the nineteenth century saw the growth of native medical knowledge that focused less on theoretical innovation than on the efficacy of therapeutic strategies. These ideas were likely to have been informed or reinforced by new anatomical knowledge disseminated by Western medical missionaries on the ground early in the century. The medical culture in the region was also marked by the formation of a series of local institutions that were fusions of Western-style hospitals and native merchant-run charity halls where diseases were studied and treated, and new public health management negotiated and implemented by experts from different traditions. – Reproduced
773 _aModern Asian Studies
906 _aMEDICINES
942 _cAR