Reinventing Licentiousness
Pornography and Modern China
- Publisher
- Cornell University Press
- Initial publish date
- Mar 2021
- Category
- Pornography, Women's Studies, China
- Recommended Age
- 18
- Recommended Grade
- 12
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9781501752971
- Publish Date
- Mar 2021
- List Price
- $60.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Reinventing Licentiousness navigates an overlooked history of representation during the transition from the Qing Empire to the Chinese Republic?a time when older, hierarchical notions of licentiousness were overlaid by a new, pornographic regime.
Y. Yvon Wang draws on previously untapped archives?ranging from police archives and surveys to ephemeral texts and pictures?to argue that pornography in China represents a unique configuration of power and desire that both reflects and shapes historical processes. On the one hand, since the late imperial period, pornography has democratized pleasure in China and opened up new possibilities of imagining desire. On the other, ongoing controversies over its definition and control show how the regulatory ideas of premodern cultural politics and the popular products of early modern cultural markets have contoured the globalized world.
Reinventing Licentiousness emphasizes the material factors, particularly at the grassroots level of consumption and trade, that governed "proper" sexual desire and led to ideological shifts around the definition of pornography. By linking the past to the present and beyond, Wang's social and intellectual history showcases circulated pornographic material as a motor for cultural change. The result is an astonishing foray into what historicizing pornography can mean for our understandings of desire, legitimacy, capitalism, and culture.
About the author
Contributor Notes
Y. Yvon Wang is Associate Professor of History at the University of Toronto. Follow them on Twitter @yyvonwang.
Editorial Reviews
This volume's concerns reach far beyond eroticism and sexuality. It explores the shifting power structures and cultural politics behind the "global modern pornographic turn" of which China was a part as it emerged at the turn of the twentieth century (14-17, 44, 202).
Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews
Wang's thought-provoking study of erotic media markets in Beijing from the 1880s to the 1930s breaks new ground by effectively bridging elite discourses and mass consumption and grounding the discussion within the context of indigenous practices and technologies.
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