Life expectancy in Japan (17th – first half of the 20th centuries)
https://doi.org/10.55105/2500-2872-2023-1-46-58
Abstract
Life expectancy is the most important indicator of the state of society and the quality of life of the people who live in it. It depends on many factors that affect mortality: nutrition, physical activity, epidemic and other diseases, natural, social and anthropogenic disasters, the level of public anxiety, the state of the environment, healthcare, hygiene, etc.
In Japan during the Tokugawa period, the body did not belong to the person himself. His mission was to “serve” – to the overlord and parents. This was possible only if the person was healthy for as long as possible. During the Tokugawa era, the Japanese were taught that only a healthy person could fulfill his duty. Healthcare was entrusted to the person himself, there was no public health system. Despite the huge differences in natural conditions, lifestyle, nutritional diet, scientific and medical ideas, in terms of life expectancy, Japan was approximately on the same level as major European countries.
After the Meiji revolution, the concept of “service” did not disappear, but now the main object of service became the state represented by the emperor. The state made serious efforts in the field of healthcare, but the negative consequences of modernization for a long time did not allow to increase life expectancy. Its slow but steady growth begins only in the second half of the 1920s. However, before the Second World War, Japan lagged significantly behind the developed countries of the West in terms of life expectancy. The expansionist policy of Japan demanded to increase the number of Japanese people. Since increasing life expectancy is a time-consuming task, the choice was made in favor of a policy of increasing the birth rate.
About the Author
A. N. MeshcheryakovRussian Federation
Meshcheryakov Alexander Nikolaevich, Dr. of Letters (History), Chief Researcher, Institute of Classical Oriental and Antiquity
105066, Moscow, Staraya Basmannaya Str., 21/4
References
1. Bacci, M.L. (2010). Demograficheskaya istoriya Evropy [Demographic History of Europe]. Saint Petersburg: Alexandria. (In Russian).
2. Dnevniki svyatogo Nikolaya Yaponskogo. (2004). [Diary of the Saint Nikolai of Japan]. Saint Petersburg: Giperion. (In Russian).
3. Kaga, Otohiko. (2020). Stolica v ogne [The Capital in Flames]. Ed. by A.N. Meshcheryakov. Translated by A.P. Belyaev, A.V. Kostyrkin, A.N. Meshcheryakov, S.A. Rodin, E.B. Saharova, E.S. Tarasova, M.V. Toropygina. Saint Petersburg: Giperion. (In Russian).
4. Kaibara, Ekiken. (2017). Kaibara Ekiken. Pouchenie v radosti. Nishikava Joken. Meshok premudrostei gorozhaninu v pomoshch‘ [Kaibara Ekiken. Rakkun. Nishikawa Joken. Chonin bukuro]. Translated by A.N. Meshcheryakov. Saint Petersburg: Giperion. (In Russian).
5. Krestovskii, V. (2002). V dal’nikh vodakh i stranakh [In Distant Waters and Lands]. Moscow: Tsentrpoligraf. (In Russian).
6. Meshcheryakov, A.N. (2021). Demograficheskii vzryv v Yaponii perioda Meiji [Population explosion in Meiji Japan]. Japanese Studies in Russia, 1, 80–100. (In Russian).
7. Senoo, Kappa. (2016). Mal’chik po prozvishchu «Eich» [Shonen H]. Translated by T.I. Red’ko- Dobrovol’skaya. Saint Peterburg: Giperion. (In Russian).
8. Shchepkin, V.V. (2022). Ainy glazami yapontsev: neizvestnaya kollektsiya V.V. Grigor’eva [Ainu in the Eyes of the Japanese: Unknown Collection of V.V. Grigor’ev]. Saint Peterburg: Arka. (In Russian).
9. Eisei nenpo. (1939). [Medical Yearbook]. Tokyo: Koseisho jinkokyoku. (In Japanese).
10. Hayami, Akira. (1993). Jinkoshi [Demography]. In Nihon Tsushi (General History of Japan), Vol. 1. Tokyo: Iwanami. (In Japanese).
11. Hirakawa, Sukehiro. (2005). Japan’s Love-Hate Relationship With the West. Folkestone: Global Oriental.
12. Kaibara, Ekiken. (1964). Yojokun, wazoku dojikun [Instruction in Health and Instruction in Upbringing Children in Japanese Manner]. Tokyo: Iwanami. (In Japanese).
13. Kito, Hiroshi. (2000). Jinko kara yomu nihon no rekishi [Japanese History From the Standpoint of Demography]. Tokyo: Kodansha. (In Japanese).
14. Kiyomizu, Shizubumi. (1929). Jinko mondai no kenkyū [Research of Demographic Problems]. Tokyo: Bunkeisha. (In Japanese).
15. Miyajima, Mikinosuke. (1928). Jinko mondai to eiyo [Demographic Problems and Nutrition]. Tokyo: Shokuyo kenkyukai. (In Japanese).
16. Nishikawa, Joken. (1988). Nihon suido ko. Suido kaiben. Kai tsusho ko [On Japanese Waters and Lands. Explanation of Waters and Lands. On Chinese and Barbaric Trade]. Tokyo: Iwanami. (In Japanese).
17. Senso to jinko mondai. (1942) [War and Demographic Problems]. Tokyo: Kokusaku kenkyujo. (In Japanese).
18. Shimizu, Katsuyoshi. (1978). Showa shoki no koshu eisei ni tsuite [On Public Hygiene in the Beginning of the Showa Era]. Minzoku eisei, 2. (In Japanese).
19. Shimomura, Kainan. (1936). Jinko ichioku [One Hundred Million of Population]. Tokyo, Daiichi shobo. (In Japanese).
20. Shinmin no michi. (1941). [The Way of Subjects]. Tokyo: Kyogakushoku. (In Japanese).
21. Shinmura, Taku. (2006). Nihon iryo shi [History of Medicine in Japan]. Tokyo: Yoshikawa kobunkan. (In Japanese).
22. Suzuki, Sadami. (2006). Kokka-o soshiki suru shiso, kokka-o koeru shiso. Shintai, chi, seimei [The Ideas Forming the Country, the Ideas Surpassing the Country. Body, Blood, Life]. In Kioka Nobuo and Suzuki Sadami (eds.), Gijutsu to shintai [Technology and Body] (pp. 61–66). Tokyo: Minerubo. (In Japanese).
23. Takano, Iwazaro. (1916). Honkoku jinko no genjo oyobi shorai [Present and Future of Population of This Country]. Tokyo: Tsuzoku daigaku. (In Japanese).
Review
For citations:
Meshcheryakov A.N. Life expectancy in Japan (17th – first half of the 20th centuries). Japanese Studies in Russia. 2023;(1):46-58. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.55105/2500-2872-2023-1-46-58