Japan established the medical system in Taiwan during its 50 years of occupation, which evolved into the present National Taiwan University Hospital system. This paper summarizes the biographies of 97 Japanese leaders in various medical disciplines during the Japanese occupation of Taiwan. These leaders were among the elite of Japan, with superior intellectual, social and economic status, who helped to establish the important attributes of medical professionals in Taiwan, such as a good academic background, heritage, and research skills
In 1897, the Japanese government began its effort to make modern Japanese citizens out of Han Taiwan...
Japan’s influence on the mindset, loyalties and identity-formation among Taiwanese citizens during t...
This study describes the Japanese expedition to Taiwan in 1874. The expedition was a part of Japan’s...
Japan established the medical system in Taiwan during its 50 years of occupation, which evolved into...
Fujita Tsuguakira was a man who established Jahyeuiwon, a governmental medical facility, during the ...
This article examines how and why a significant number of Okinawan islanders studied medicine in col...
The plague in Taiwan was the first plague in the Japanese Empire and was a crisis and opportunity th...
This book explores Japan's "scientific colonialism" through a careful study of the changing roles of...
This paper examines the trends and prospects of medical history in Japan. The study of medical histo...
Medical education and research under Japanese rule characterize the construction and cracking of med...
My dissertation, “Cosmopolitan Medicine Nationalized: the Making of Japanese State-Empire and Overse...
In order to explore the contingent relationship between professionalism and colonialism, this disser...
Medical school curricular reform to address humanism is now a prominent issue in Taiwan. Taiwan's co...
The Severance Union Medical College had produced a total of 898 graduates before liberation (1945). ...
Successful modernization at home, the self-congratulatory ideology of State Shintō and the trend of ...
In 1897, the Japanese government began its effort to make modern Japanese citizens out of Han Taiwan...
Japan’s influence on the mindset, loyalties and identity-formation among Taiwanese citizens during t...
This study describes the Japanese expedition to Taiwan in 1874. The expedition was a part of Japan’s...
Japan established the medical system in Taiwan during its 50 years of occupation, which evolved into...
Fujita Tsuguakira was a man who established Jahyeuiwon, a governmental medical facility, during the ...
This article examines how and why a significant number of Okinawan islanders studied medicine in col...
The plague in Taiwan was the first plague in the Japanese Empire and was a crisis and opportunity th...
This book explores Japan's "scientific colonialism" through a careful study of the changing roles of...
This paper examines the trends and prospects of medical history in Japan. The study of medical histo...
Medical education and research under Japanese rule characterize the construction and cracking of med...
My dissertation, “Cosmopolitan Medicine Nationalized: the Making of Japanese State-Empire and Overse...
In order to explore the contingent relationship between professionalism and colonialism, this disser...
Medical school curricular reform to address humanism is now a prominent issue in Taiwan. Taiwan's co...
The Severance Union Medical College had produced a total of 898 graduates before liberation (1945). ...
Successful modernization at home, the self-congratulatory ideology of State Shintō and the trend of ...
In 1897, the Japanese government began its effort to make modern Japanese citizens out of Han Taiwan...
Japan’s influence on the mindset, loyalties and identity-formation among Taiwanese citizens during t...
This study describes the Japanese expedition to Taiwan in 1874. The expedition was a part of Japan’s...