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The Forgotten Japanese Doctors of Prewar Siam: Medicine, Migration, and Imperialism from the 1890s to 1945

With Thommayanti’s Khu Kam and MR Kukrit Pramoj’s Four Reigns, two of Thailand’s best-known novels mention Japanese doctors practicing in prewar Bangkok. These fictional portrayals reflect a historical reality: Japanese physicians and dentists did indeed practice in Siam during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This is documented in travelogues, newspapers, and archival records. Yet despite this evidence, Japanese doctors have received little attention in either the history of medicine in Thailand or in studies of Japanese-Thai relations.

This lecture explores the largely forgotten story of Japanese medical practitioners in Siam. It traces their arrival, their evolving role in the kingdom’s medical infrastructure, and their eventual deportation, alongside most other Japanese residents, at the end of World War II. In doing so, the talk sheds new light on a neglected chapter not only of Thai and Japanese history.

About the speaker

David M. Malitz is Principal Researcher at the German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ) in Tokyo, where he leads the institute’s research cluster Japan in Transregional Perspective. His research explores the past and present of Japan’s relations with Southeast Asia with a particular emphasis on Thailand. Before joining the DIJ, he taught in the BALAC Program at the Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University, where he remains a Visiting Research Fellow in the Department of History. He is also a member of the Modern Monarchy in Global Perspective Research Hub at the University of Sydney.

When

Thursday, 24 July 2025 at 19:00

Where

Lecture Room, 4/Floor, The Siam Society

Admission

Members and Students (to undergraduate level) — Free of charge
Non-Members — THB 300

For more information, please contact

To book your place, please contact Khun Pinthip at 02 661 6470-3 ext 203 or pinthip@thesiamsociety.org

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