Neither Donkey nor Horse tells the story of how Chinese medicine was
transformed from the antithesis of modernity in the early twentieth
century into a potent symbol of and vehicle for China's exploration of
its own modernity half a century later. Instead of viewing this
transition as derivative of the political history of modern China, Sean
Hsiang-lin Lei argues that China's medical history had a life of its
own, one that at times directly influenced the ideological struggle over
the meaning of China's modernity and the Chinese state.
Far from being a remnant of China's premodern past, Chinese medicine in
the twentieth century coevolved with Western medicine and the
Nationalist state, undergoing a profound
transformation--institutionally, epistemologically, and materially--that
resulted in the creation of a modern Chinese medicine. This new medicine
was derided as "neither donkey nor horse" because it necessarily
betrayed both of the parental traditions and therefore was doomed to
fail. Yet this hybrid medicine survived, through self-innovation and
negotiation, thus challenging the conception of modernity that rejected
the possibility of productive crossbreeding between the modern and the
traditional.
By exploring the production of modern Chinese medicine and China's
modernity in tandem, Lei offers both a political history of medicine and
a medical history of the Chinese state.