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Nutritional Policies and International Diplomacy
The impact of Tadasu Saiki and the Imperial State Institute of Nutrition (Tokyo, 1916-1945)
Josep Lluis Barona Vilar
- 240 páginas
- English
- PDF
- Disponible en iOS y Android
Nutritional Policies and International Diplomacy
The impact of Tadasu Saiki and the Imperial State Institute of Nutrition (Tokyo, 1916-1945)
Josep Lluis Barona Vilar
Información del libro
This book offers a general approach to the importance of nutrition and public health policies in the process of modernisation of Japan during the interwar years. It describes the origins of scientific and technical modernisation during the Edo, Meiji, and Taisho periods, including the demographic and epidemiologic background, and the birth of a public health administration parallel to the strengthening and expansion of the Japanese empire. Special attention is given to the cultural significance of rice for the Japanese population, and its close relation to disease and nutritional deficiencies, especially beriberi.
The second part of the book is devoted to the prominent figure of Tadasu Saiki (1876-1959), founding father of Japanese nutritional science, and his initiative in creating the Imperial State Institute for Nutrition (ISIN) in Tokyo. The new institution boosted national policies and a wide international diplomacy generating great expectations in Japan and abroad. The international impact of Japanese nutritional research and dietary policies is also analysed. The book ends with an analysis of the negative consequences of the Second World War, a critical breakdown in health and nutrition among the Japanese population.
Preguntas frecuentes
Información
Índice
- Cover
- Copyright information
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Nutritional policies and international diplomacy: soft power in favour of Japanese prestige
- 2 Demographic and epidemiologic background. The birth of a public health administration
- 3 Rice in Japanese culture
- 4 Rice, diet, and the problem of beriberi
- 5 Tadasu Saiki (1876–1959), founding father of Japanese nutritional science
- 6 The Imperial State Institute of Nutrition (1920) in interwar years
- 7 The international impact of Japanese nutritional policies
- 8 The consequences of the Second World War
- Conclusions
- Sources and bibliography
- Appendix. The nutrition song, by Tadasu Saiki
- Series index