Selected Materials from The Ohio State University Libraries Collections on display in conjunction with the conference on
Science, Technology and Medicine in East Asia: Policy, Practice, and Implications in a Global Context
Mershon Center, October 7 - 9, 2011
Japanese collections include a wide range of resources supporting historical research on science, technology and medicine in Japan. Selected materials range from a course catalog that Ohio State’s Professor Thomas Corwin Mendenhall (1841-1924) brought back from Tokyo University where he taught physics ca. 1878-1880, to a game highlighting the work of Nobel laureate Hideki Yukawa (Physics, 1949), to research resources about Japanese biological and chemical warfare, and books about the careers of Japanese women scientists.
Newspaper cartoons document Einstein’s visit to Japan in 1922, a cartoonist’s ideas about the future of the telephone (1924), popular awareness of scientific advances in the treatment of infectious diseases, and reactions to the passage of the Immigration Act of 1924 in the United States. With regard to the latter, an American citizen who was particularly incensed by the passage of that act, which excluded Japanese from American citizenship, was Elmer Sperry, a leading American engineer and businessman. As an organizer of the World Engineering Congress of 1929, he took the initiative to locate it in Tokyo.
The exhibit includes materials from that congress to which scientists and businessmen traveled from all over the world. The exhibit was mounted with the cooperation of many departments in the Libraries. It includes resources from Rare Books and the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum, as well as from the general circulating collections.
Selected Works in the Exhibit
Science
First electric light on the Ginza in Tokyo, 1882
An image of a woodblock print inserted in the company history of the Tokyo Electric Company, Ltd published in celebration of its 50th anniversary in 1940.
Tōkyō Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Gojūnenshi
Yasui Shōtarō
東京電氣株式會社五十年史 / 安井正太郎
Tōkyō : Tōkyō Shibaura Denki, 1940
Library: Rare Book Collections
Teijiro Muramatsu. “Electricity: Generating Light for the New Era,”
Tokyo, Japan : Hitachi, Ltd.,No. 124
Library: Book Depository
Yukawa Hideki – Japan’s first Nobel laureate (Physics, 1949)
Niels Bohr visited Japan in 1937 at the request of Yoshio Nishina (protégé of Bohr and patron of Hideki Yukawa).
The excerpted panel from the manga on the right shows Yukawa and Bohr in conversation at a ryokan in Kyoto, during Bohr’s 1937 visit to Japan. Yukawa is kneeling at the feet of Bohr, who is shown wearing a yukata, relaxing in a wicker chair. Yukawa seems to be ingratiating himself to the famous physicist, asking him how he likes Japan, but his real purpose is to present his research.
In the two pages open in the manga on the left, the full ramifications of the encounter with Bohr in Japan for Yukawa become clear. The page on the right (2d row up from the bottom) shows Bohr talking with Nishina and Yukawa. Bohr is questioning Yukawa about why he wants to introduce the possibility of a previously unknown fundamental particle. The following page describes new research by CalTech physicists that suggests Yukawa’s theory has merit. Although Bohr was relatively slow to accept Yukawa’s way of thinking, his ideas are receiving recognition.
Yukawa Hideki to Tomonaga Shin'ichirō : Futatsu no Nōberu Butsurigaku Shō
Tokinosu Naoki
湯川秀樹と朝永振一郎 : 二つのノーベル物理学賞 / 鴇巣直樹 画麻生はじめ
Tokyo : Maruzen, 1994
Library: Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum
Manga Jinbutsu Kagaku no Rekishi
Yamazaki Masakatsu, Kimoto Tadaaki
漫画人物科学の歴史 / 山崎正勝, 木本忠昭
Tokyo : Horupu Shuppan, 1990-1992
Library: Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum
Atomic Board Game: A Science Education Manga
Genshi Sugoroku: Kagaku Kyōiku Manga
原子双六 科学教育漫画 : 湯川博士ノーベル賞受賞記念/下馬三郎画
Nihon Hatsumei Shinbunsha, ca 1950 日本発明新聞社
Fukui, Japan’s first Nobel laureate in Chemistry in 1981 for contributions to chemical reaction theory.
Women Scientists of Japan
Medicine
Infectious Diseases
In the early twentieth century discussion of research about infectious diseases in Japan was so widespread that it became part of political parlance. In this manga from 1922, Prime Minister Korekiyo Takahashi (1854-1936) is depicted as a doctor dealing with political issues as “infections.”
On the first shelf below, Shibasaburo Kitasato (1852-1931), Japan’s foremost bacteriologist, is depicted with Robert Koch (1843-1910), his mentor. Also shown are Paul Ehrlich and Kiyoshi Shiga, Kitasato’s colleague. Robert Koch visited Japan in 1908. Kitasato gained world fame for his work on tetanus and the co-discovery of natural immunity.
The second shelf contains two educational manga about Hideyo Noguchi (1876-1928), who discovered the spirochete that causes paresis, a psychotic disorder. The cover of one manga shows Noguchi with the Rockefeller Institute building in New York, where he conducted research, behind him. The other manga is open to a page showing his elation at achieving his important discovery while conveying the news to his wife, Mary, and his mentor, Simon Flexner (1863-1946), director of the Rockefeller Institute.
The third shelf contains examples of Japanese military research in bio-chemical weaponry. The 731 project was infamous for its experimentation on captive human subjects.
Prime Minister Korekiyo Takahashi (1854-1936) as a doctor
Shibasaburo Kitasato with Robert Koch, and Noguchi Hideyo
Omoshiro Kagakushi Raiburarī v. 11
おもしろ科学史ライブラリー
Tōkyō : Akane Shobō, 1993-1994
Library: Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum
Noguchi Hideyo: Gakushū Manga Sekai no Denki
野口英世: 学習漫画世界の伝記
Tōkyō : Shūeisha, 2002
Library: Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum
Noguchi Hideyo : Densenbyō ni Inochi o Kaketa Igaku no Senshi
野口英世 : 伝染病に命をかけた医学の戦士
Shogakkan, 1996.
Library: Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum
731
Yamagiwa Katsusaburo
Technology
Thomas Corwin Mendenhall (1841-1924)
Mendenhall was the first professor appointed at the founding of the Ohio State University. Shortly thereafter, in 1878 he was invited to teach physics at Tokyo University, where he explored various physical phenomena, including gravity and the “magic mirror” (19th century romanization: MAKIO). Back at Ohio State, undergraduates chose that name for their student yearbook, with the conviction that a yearbook is a “mirror of student life” – and it continues to be published under that name until today. On exhibit is the first volume, which was published with the characters for “magic mirror” on the cover.
Also on exhibit is the course catalog of Tokyo University which Mendenhall brought back to Ohio State (Note: the 19th century romanization for Tokyo was TOKIO).
Telephone
Immigration
The Immigration Act of 1924
The Immigration Act of 1924 effectively forbade Japanese from gaining citizenship in the US. The cartoon shows a smug Uncle Sam eating a California watermelon, while a Japanese farmer looks on from outside. Despite this legislation, communication in science, technology and medicine between Japanese and Americans actually continued until Pearl Harbor (December, 1941).
World Engineering Congress (Tokyo, 1929)
However, one American citizen who was particularly incensed by this political action was Elmer Sperry, a leading American engineer and businessman. Sperry, who had many friends in Japan, was deeply concerned about the deteriorating official climate between the US and Japan created as a result of the Immigration Act. Therefore, as an organizer of the World Engineering Congress, he took the initiative to locate it in Tokyo. Held in 1929, it was the first truly international meeting of its kind in Japan. The second shelf shows labels for conference attendees to use on their baggage during excursions arranged for them outside Tokyo that were printed in the conference proceedings, along with a guide prepared for them.
Elmer Sperry; Inventor and Engineer
Hughes, Thomas Parke
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1971.
OSU Science and Engineering Library
Proceedings: World Engineering Congress (1st : 1929 )
Tokyo, World Engineering Congress, 1931.
OSU Book Depository
The Four Immigrants Manga
The Four Immigrants Manga, on the left, portrays the life of Japanese immigrants to the US in the early twentieth century.
Einstein in Japan
Albert Einstein visited Japan in 1922. He learned of his Nobel prize shortly before or upon arriving in Japan, as shown on the page opened in the manga book. The passengers on the train in the newspaper cartoon are discussing Einstein’s theory of relativity.