Established in 1974, the Journal of Japanese Studies features original, analytically rigorous articles from across the humanities and social sciences, including comparative and transnational scholarship in which Japan plays a major part

Takayama 48:1

ABSTRACT

EMILIE Y. TAKAYAMA
The History of Aesthetic Surgery in Early Twentieth-Century Japan

This article traces the origins, diffusion, and institutionalization of aesthetic surgery in prewar Japan.  It focuses on the first generation of cosmetic surgeons who legitimized procedures such as rhinoplasty and blepharoplasty for a population that previously held taboos against invasive surgery.  It shows how surgeons imported discourses and surgical techniques from the West and how they used these procedures to fit local ideals and demands.  Plastic surgery in Japan, as elsewhere, catered to men when it was reconstructive, but the cosmetic aspect targeted women.  This article also discusses how, by the 1920s, aesthetic procedures spread to colonial Korea.

Volume 48, Number 1 (Winter 2022)
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