Thesis ID: CBB001562785

Why Sex Mattered: Science and Visions of Transformation in Modern China (2012)

unapi

Chiang, Howard Hsueh-Hao (Author)


Creager, Angela N. H.
Princeton University
Elman, Benjamin A.
Publication date: 2012
Language: English


Publication Date: 2012
Edition Details: Advisors: Elman, Benjamin A.; Angela N. H. Creager
Physical Details: 412 pp.

Amidst the disintegration of the Qing Empire (1644-1911), men and women in China began to understand their differences in terms of modern scientific knowledge. Why Sex Mattered provides an explanation for the relatively recent emergence of a psycho-biological notion of sex in Chinese culture, focusing in particular on the ways in which the introduction of the Western biomedical sciences had transformed the normative meanings of gender, sexuality, and the body in the twentieth century. This dissertation revises the conventional view that China has "opened up" to the global circulation of sexual ideas and practices only after the economic reforms of the late 1970s. Drawing on scientific publications, medical journals, newspaper clippings, popular magazines, scholarly textbooks, fictional and periodical literatures, oral histories, and other primary sources, this study highlights the 1920s as an earlier, more pivotal turning point in the modern definitions of Chinese sexual identity and desire. The evolving discourse of same-sex desire and the biologization of gender norms constituted two epistemological ruptures that complicated the shifting correlations of sex, gender, and sexuality in the Republican period (1911-1949). The extensive media coverage of sex change in postwar Taiwan epitomized the geocultural legacy of these earlier developments. Weaving together intellectual developments with social, cultural, and political history, this dissertation aims to accomplish three goals: it argues for the centrality of sexual scientific knowledge in modern China's cultural formation; it highlights the role of the body as a catalyst in the mutual transformations of Chinese national modernity and the social significance of sex; and, grounded in the historical-epistemological analysis of the vocabulary and visual knowledge of sexual science, it establishes a genealogical relationship between the demise of eunuchism and the emergence of transsexuality in China. This genealogy, above all, maps the underexplored history of China's modern "geobody" onto the more focused history of the biomedicalized human body. The isochronal evolution of "China" and sex, two constructs that seemed the most immutable of all, evinced the gradual decentering of the familiar frame of colonial modernity with Sinophone articulations in the course of the twentieth century.

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Description Cited in ProQuest Diss. & Thes. . ProQuest Doc. ID 1036669092.


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Authors & Contributors
Bjelic, Dusšan I.
Bunzl, Matti
Carstens, Lisa
Chiang, Howard Hsueh-Hao
Cuomu, Mingji
Deslauriers, Marguerite
Journals
Classical World
American Quarterly
Asian Medicine: Tradition and Modernity
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
History Workshop Journal
Journal of the History of Biology
Publishers
University of Michigan
Ashgate Publishing
Basic Books
Berg
Harvard University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
Concepts
Science and gender
Sexuality
Sex differences
Human body
Medicine and gender
Biology
People
Aristotle
Atlas, Charles
Cope, Edward Drinker
Galilei, Galileo
Krafft-Ebing, Richard von
Morgan, Thomas Hunt
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
17th century
Ancient
18th century
20th century, early
Places
United States
Europe
Greece
Great Britain
Rome (Italy)
Tibet
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