
Translation at Work
Chinese Medicine in the First Global Age
Harold J. Cook(Editor)
Brill (Publisher)
Published on 30. January 2020
Book
Hardback
226 pages
978-90-04-36274-1 (ISBN)
Description
During the first period of globalization medical ideas and practices originating in China became entangled in the medical activities of other places, sometimes at long distances. They produced effects through processes of alteration once known as translatio, meaning movements in place, status, and meaning. The contributors to this volume examine occasions when intermediaries responded creatively to aspects of Chinese medicine, whether by trying to pass them on or to draw on them in furtherance of their own interests. Practitioners in Japan, at the imperial court, and in early and late Enlightenment Europe therefore responded to translations creatively, sometimes attempting to build bridges of understanding that often collapsed but left innovation in their wake.
Contributors are Marta Hanson, Gianna Pomata, Beatriz Puente-Ballesteros, Wei Yu Wayne Tan, Margaret Garber, Daniel Trambaiolo, and Motoichi Terada.
???????Winner of the J. Worth Estes Prize 2021 awarded by the American Association for the History of Medicine:
Beatriz Puentes-Ballesteros, "Chocolate in China: Interweaving cultural histories of an imperfectly connected world," in Harold Cook (ed.), Translation at Word: Chinese Medicine in the First Global Age (Leiden, Boston: Brill | Rodopi, 2020).
Contributors are Marta Hanson, Gianna Pomata, Beatriz Puente-Ballesteros, Wei Yu Wayne Tan, Margaret Garber, Daniel Trambaiolo, and Motoichi Terada.
???????Winner of the J. Worth Estes Prize 2021 awarded by the American Association for the History of Medicine:
Beatriz Puentes-Ballesteros, "Chocolate in China: Interweaving cultural histories of an imperfectly connected world," in Harold Cook (ed.), Translation at Word: Chinese Medicine in the First Global Age (Leiden, Boston: Brill | Rodopi, 2020).
More details
Series
100
Language
English
Place of publication
Leiden
Netherlands
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
7 farbige Abbildungen, 7 s/w Abbildungen
7 Illustrations, color; 7 Illustrations, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 239 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-04-36274-1 (9789004362741)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Harold J. Cook, Ph.D. (1981), University of Michigan, is the John F. Nickoll Professor of History at Brown University and former professor of the History of Medicine at UCL. He is an award-winning author on the history of medicine and related subjects.
Content
Contents
Preface and Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations and Tables
Notes on Contributors
Introduction: Translating Chinese Medical Ways in the Early Modern Period
??Harold J. Cook
?1?Travels of a Chinese Pulse Treatise: The Latin and French Translations of the Tuzhu maijue bianzhen ?????? (1650s-1730s)
??Marta Hanson and Gianna Pomata
?2?Chocolate in China: Interweaving Cultural Histories of an Imperfectly Connected World
??Beatriz Puente-Ballesteros
?3?Rediscovering Willem ten Rhijne's De Acupunctura: The Transformation of Chinese Acupuncture in Japan
??Wei Yu Wayne Tan
?4?Domesticating Moxa: The Reception of Moxibustion in a Late Seventeenth-Century German Medical Journal
??Margaret D. Garber
?5?Epidemics and Epistemology in Early Modern Japan: Japanese Responses to Chinese Writings on Warm Epidemics and Sand-Rashes
??Daniel Trambaiolo
?6?The Montpellier Version of Sphygmology: Classical Chinese Medicine and Vitalism
??Motoichi Terada
Index
Preface and Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations and Tables
Notes on Contributors
Introduction: Translating Chinese Medical Ways in the Early Modern Period
??Harold J. Cook
?1?Travels of a Chinese Pulse Treatise: The Latin and French Translations of the Tuzhu maijue bianzhen ?????? (1650s-1730s)
??Marta Hanson and Gianna Pomata
?2?Chocolate in China: Interweaving Cultural Histories of an Imperfectly Connected World
??Beatriz Puente-Ballesteros
?3?Rediscovering Willem ten Rhijne's De Acupunctura: The Transformation of Chinese Acupuncture in Japan
??Wei Yu Wayne Tan
?4?Domesticating Moxa: The Reception of Moxibustion in a Late Seventeenth-Century German Medical Journal
??Margaret D. Garber
?5?Epidemics and Epistemology in Early Modern Japan: Japanese Responses to Chinese Writings on Warm Epidemics and Sand-Rashes
??Daniel Trambaiolo
?6?The Montpellier Version of Sphygmology: Classical Chinese Medicine and Vitalism
??Motoichi Terada
Index