Publication

1995 - University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, Hawaii

Language

English

Word Count

58,250 words, Guess

Page Count

233 pages

Identifiers

and 1 more
  • LibraryThing384827

Classifications

  • DDC306/.0951
  • LCCHQ18.C6 D55 1995

Description

With the disintegration of Confucian cosmology after the fall of the imperial system in China, medical science was introduced as an epistemological foundation for social order. The construction of sexuality as a dangerous drive which was thought to form the very core of the individual led to the emergence of a wide range of identities like the menstruating girl, the hysterical housewife, the masturbating adolescent and the syphilitic husband. The naturalization of desire also introduced a tension between the sexual responsibilities of the individual and the coercive intervention of civil society in the name of the collective health of future generations. Although new categories of analysis, such as 'population', 'race', 'sex', 'woman' and 'youth' were introduced to early Republican China from abroad, their reception and adaptation were founded on cultural reorientations which may have taken place as long before as the 17th and 18th centuries. Instead of describing the rise of normative naturalism as a derivative discourse from 'the West', this book recognizes that the roots of modernizing representations may have had to be sought in a rich and diverse past in China itself. The author's analysis is based on medical and lay texts such as handbooks, marriage guides and introductions to physiology and sexual hygiene. The epilogue demonstrates how the sexual identities invented early this century are still in place in China today.

Subjects

Topics

WomenYouthHistorySex roleAdolescentSex customsWomen, china

Places

Other Editions

  • Sex, culture, and modernity in ChinaUniversity of Hawaii Press1995

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