Sexuality in China

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"Love" sign at Foreigners' Street theme park in Chongqing, southwest China, location of the aborted Love Land sex theme park

Sexuality in China has undergone dramatic changes throughout time. These changes can be categorized as "sexual revolution".[1] Chinese sexual attitudes, behaviors, ideology, and relations have especially gone through dramatic shifts in the past four decades due to reform and opening up of the country.[1] Many of these changes have found expression in the public forum through a variety of behaviors and ideas.[1] These include, but are not limited to the following cultural shifts: a separation of sex and marriage, such as pre- and extramarital sex; a separation of sex from love and child-bearing such as internet sex and one-night stands; an increase in observable sexual diversity such as homo- and bisexual behavior and fetishism; an increase in socially acceptable displays and behaviors of female sexual desire; a boom in the sex industry; and a more open discussion of sex topics, including sex studies at colleges, media reports, formal publications, online information, extensive public health education, and public displays of affection.[1]

As can be seen by these developments, China no longer exerts strict control over personal sexual behavior.[2] Sex is increasingly considered something personal and can now be differentiated from a traditional system that featured legalized marital sex and legal controls over childbirth. The reduction in controls on sexual behavior has initiated a freer atmosphere for sexual expression. More and more people now regard sexual rights as basic human rights, so that everyone has the right and freedom to pursue his or her own sexual bliss.[3]

Change in the field of sexuality reveals not only a change of sexual attitudes and behaviors but also a series of related social changes via the process of social transformation. From the sociological perspective, there have been several main factors that have created the current turning point in the contemporary Chinese social context.

Contemporary history[edit]

Since the early 1980s sex and sexuality have become prominent themes of public debate in China, after three decades of Maoist rule during which discourses on sexuality were subject to stringent ideological controls.[4]

Market reform and opening-up policy[edit]

The denial of the ideals of the Cultural Revolution, during which sex was used as a political tool to control people, is an influential factor in making changes in Chinese society.[3] During the Cultural Revolution, individual sexual preferences were supposed to give way to lofty revolutionary ideals. Extramarital affairs were portrayed as a degenerate lifestyle, and consensual pre-marital sex was immoral. Homosexuality was illegal and would be punished under the statutes for hooliganism. A person had to be sexually well-behaved in order to get a promotion or advance in his or her career.[5]

Reforms in the area of sexuality show a lessening amount of government control over individuals' private life. Many sex-related issues and personal lifestyles are no longer relegated to the field of politics and thus exempt from severe legal punishment or moral condemnation. Sex has been returned to the personal sphere under the domain of self-management. These changes can be seen in the weakened interference and control of the government in sex-related areas, strengthened sexual resources in the open market, a diversity of sexual lifestyles, and a strong appeal for sexual rights as human rights.

For instance, the government's control of personal lives has gradually retreated since the passing of the new marriage registration principles in October 2003, which again simplified the processes of marriage and divorce. The committed parties no longer need certification or confirmation from their place of work or the local Resident Committee to get married or divorced. The pre-marital physical, which among other things once contained an indication of the woman's virginity, is no longer obligatory. The new principles reflect a greater respect for human rights, a protection of marital freedom, and a change in the governmental function with regards to sexual issues.

At the same time, some major social policies have also played an important part. For example, the side effect of the family planning policy is to promote a separation of sexual behavior from reproductive purposes. If a couple can give birth to one child only, sexual behavior is no longer solely practiced to produce babies but also for pleasure. Changes in the legal code have reflected this while also publicly acknowledging sex as a pursuit of happiness.

Stable economic development and consumerism[edit]

Under recent policies, the social economy has seen stable and sustainable growth, especially in big cities.[6] Material wealth and an increase in quality of life have brought optimism and consumerism which continually send messages to the individual that it is acceptable to seek sexual happiness.[3]

Various sex products are now openly sold in the market. Sexual information is spreading directly or indirectly through such public media as street-side advertising. Fewer people turn away when they see intimate behavior between lovers in public. Condom vending machines are seen on campuses. Products for safe sex are available in convenience stores around city. Even major radio and television stations have started picking up on sex-related topics. Educational programs on sex have become popular. Video shops, big or small, sell sexually oriented films produced either by domestic or foreign directors. More sexual information can also be quickly and easily found on the Internet. Intermingled information, good or bad, has pushed aside many of the traditional sexual taboos and thus shaken the norm of sexual practice.[citation needed][7]

The pursuit of profit may well push sexual minorities such as gays and lesbians to appeal for their rights not just for legal reasons but also to tap into their particular market niches.[5] In a stable, developing economy and consumer culture, an emphasis on individual enjoyment and a respect for differentiation and diversity are now well established and perhaps even flourishing in an atmosphere of confidence and optimism.

Growth of the middle class[edit]

One very important factor driving the social change in contemporary China is the great changes in and reorganization of social stratification.[8] One of the most important features is white collar workers — the rise of the new middle class in China. The new middle class tends to stress their personal happiness and pay more attention to their own quality of life. Goods such as lifestyle magazines are priced according to the income of the target audience. These include pinwei magazines which market high quality or luxury goods, men's health magazines which promote muscled physiques, and erotic magazines depicting both men and women.[9]

Based on observations, all the visible changes in sexual discourse — including those in gay culture — can be considered a part of middle class culture. Most of the related website owners and participants belong to the white collar workers group. The new lifestyle in sexuality fields such as the DINK — "double income, no kids"—family, single groups, and cohabitating couples who violate the traditional sex norms are led by middle-class people. They are also the target groups for most gay bars, dating parties, so-called "dating on Saturday" programs, and sports groups, among others, in cities.

The rise and growth of this middle class has the potential to produce various sexual emancipation discourses, including homosexuality, to break the silence in Chinese society.

Globalization[edit]

Since China adopted the policies of opening up and market reform, globalization has meant that there have been many people traveling across countries and from one region to another in China. It means information sharing, product sharing, capital flow, and value sharing, which increasingly includes some basic understanding of sexual rights, gender equality, and human rights. The country's various projects on sexuality, reproductive health, and AIDS prevention each have raised people's awareness of sexuality. Some non-profit international or national organizations are also working in China, while at the same time the international academic community, together with Chinese scholars, is sponsoring workshops and conferences for research on sexuality.[10]

Popularization of higher education[edit]

Popularization of higher education has become one of the major changes in Chinese education.[11] According to recent statistics publicized by the Shanghai Education Commission, the gross entrance rate into higher education in Shanghai is 55 percent, ranking first in the country. Beijing comes a close second, at 53 percent. In the same year, the nation's gross entrance rate into higher education has not yet reached 19 percent. More than half of the population aged 18 to 22 in Shanghai and Beijing can get access to some form of higher education.

The impact of higher education has been significant. The younger generation may adopt a different sexual ideology from the older generation because they have more opportunities to get exposure to humanities and social sciences.[11] They are more geared toward the pursuit of equality, freedom, and self-realization. At the same time, society pays more and more attention to elite intellectuals such as professors, researchers, lawyers, and policy-making consultants. Their opinions and ideas are expressed to the public in media reports and at conferences. The spreading of knowledge has been the most influential way to eliminate sex discrimination and sex inequality.[11]

Feminist discourse in China[edit]

Gender equality has been one of China's national policies. The Cultural Revolution slogan "Women can hold up half the sky" is well known. Many organizations and centers for gender were established after the Fourth UN Conference on Women was held in Beijing in 1995.[12] The government sponsored the conference and then signed the UN documents pledging gender equality, and official women's organizations and feminist activists and scholars have been fighting against gender discrimination and working on achieving gender equality. Their struggle has permeated many aspects of the people's social lives.[13]

Mainstream feminist discourse in China tends to ignore sexuality issues, considering those topics either unimportant or as stirring up unnecessary trouble. Nevertheless, the critical thinking of feminist discourse has challenged stereotyped gender roles, including sexuality roles. The latter especially has influenced many young people.[13]

The role of feminist discourse in the field of sexuality has been to redefine a woman's sex role. It criticized the double standards of sex between women and men, which included traditionally held norms such as that men should be aggressive and active, women passive and inactive; that men should have stronger sexual desires and women weaker; that men should be sexually experienced before marriage but women retain their virginity; that women should not ask too much for sex and should consider men's satisfaction as their own. The critical feminist discourse is also rewriting the gender views in Chinese society. Some feminist scholars have started to emphasize women's sexual rights and the diversity of sexuality among Chinese women. Thus China's sexual revolution is also women's sexual revolution, as evidenced by these trends.[13]

While women in previous generations were expected to marry in their twenties, many highly educated women are deciding to hold off on marriage into their 30s or longer. Their increased economic power has given them autonomy so they don't need to rely on a spouse. But the Chinese media has still given them a derogatory name, shengnu (剩女) or "leftover women".[14]

In 2005, China added new provisions to the Law on Women's Right Protection to include sexual harassment.[15] In 2006 "The Shanghai Supplement" was drafted to help further define sexual harassment in China.[16]

Role of the media and the Internet[edit]

The media is the catalytic agent of sexual revolution in China. The Internet, too, is one of the most prominent agents wielding important influence among the Chinese people through promoting alliances, sharing knowledge, and providing a platform where various voices can be heard. There are numerous individuals who come to accept their sexual identity mainly because of the Internet. The Internet is a powerful channel for people to find sexual partners, to organize off-line activities, or just simply to have access to sexual knowledge and sex-related information.[17]

The Internet has also been a great proponent of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transsexual (LGBT) identity in China. Since the late 1990s, members of the LGBT community have used the Internet to access and share information, form relationships, and cultivate queer identities and communities. However, despite the seemingly unconstrained development of the LGBT community in the global cyberspace, there are constraints. Some constraints are informed by socio-economic factors. There are some gay, lesbian and queer people who cannot afford a computer and access to the Internet at home and therefore are obliged to use Internet cafes, where they may be compelled to avoid certain websites for fear of being monitored by other people. Some constraints are politically informed. Gay and lesbian-oriented websites tend to be short-lived due to Internet regulations and controls of the government. Furthermore, despite an online proliferation of the LGBT identity, the community remains subordinate to China's hegemonic discourse on sexuality. Rarely do traditional Chinese media outlets recognise LGBT identity, let alone embrace and validate the community.[18]

Sexual revolution[edit]

In Chinese language, xingkaifang () is the phrase to describe the sexual opening-up,[19] "a globalizing sexual culture prevailing China."[19] Urbanization in China has been accelerating the sexual revolution by providing people with more private space and freedom to enjoy sex, as compared with what was afforded by the traditional countryside way of life. The Internet provides even more powerful support and makes it possible for many people to remain anonymous, to surf the Internet from one website to another, to write their own blogs, and to express what they want in an environment where there is much less prying by co-workers, neighbors, or other peer groups and less judgments put upon their behavior. However, Internet censorship in China does remain an issue. Chinese government has successfully blocked activists from participating political discourse on the internet.[20]

Government interventions[edit]

The "Group Licentiousness" law[edit]

The PRC Government still regulates sexuality to a greater degree than the governments of Western countries. In 2010, Ma Xiaohai, a 53-year-old computer science professor,[21] was sentenced to 3 12 years in prison[21] for organising wife-swapping events,[22] breaking the "group licentiousness law" (聚众淫乱罪).

Opposition to the Love Land theme park in Chongqing[edit]

The proposed Love Land sex theme park in Chongqing, southwest China, was never opened due to government pressure. The PRC Government suspended its construction in May 2009 and ordered it demolished for being vulgar and explicit.[23][24] The park was to include displays of giant genitalia and naked bodies, and host an exhibition on the history of human sexuality along with sex technique workshops.[25] The closure is a reflection of the conservatism with regard to sex in China.[26] The theme park was originally due to be opened in October 2009, but was demolished earlier that year, since it was deemed to be a negative influence on Chinese society.[27][28][29]

AIDS and sexuality[edit]

The importance of AIDS prevention in China has been stressed by both the global society and the Chinese government.[30] Such an increase in concern can be a double-edged sword for the sexual revolution in China. It provides both opportunities and risks. Sexuality has to be openly discussed because of AIDS concerns. For example, in the summer of 2005, China Central Television discussed the topic of AIDS under the title "Homosexuality: Confronting is Better than Evading." Scholars and activists have gained the legitimacy to talk publicly about the so-called "high risk" groups such as gay men and sex workers and have been developing strategies to work together with the government, replacing strategies of attacking the "evil" with models for caring for those at risk.[30]

Sexuality, including homosexuality, has started to enter the public forum. The whole process is still ongoing, but it is breaking the silence on sexuality taboos.[31] AIDS concerns also bring funding, and many organizations are working to fight the illness. The related knowledge and information on sexuality is spreading continuously among Chinese people, and it also strongly helps people to overcome the stereotypes, bias and ignorance regarding AIDS and sexual health issues.[30]

See also[edit]

Further reading[edit]

  • Evans Harriet (1997) Women and Sexuality in China: Dominant Discourses of Female Sexuality and Gender Since 1949. ISBN 0-7456-1398-5
  • Elaine Jeffreys (editor) (2006) Sex and Sexuality in China. ISBN 0-415-40143-7

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d The International Encyclopedia of Sexuality: China, Demographics and a Historical Perspective Archived 2012-05-27 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Leiwen, Jiang. Has China Completed Demographic Transition? Archived 2008-02-27 at the Wayback Machine, Institute of Population Research, Peking University.
  3. ^ a b c Barboza, David (March 4, 2007). A people's sexual revolution in China. Internal Herald Tribune
  4. ^ Jeffreys, Elaine; Yu, Haiqing (2015). Sex in China (1 ed.). Cambridge UK: Polity Press. ISBN 978-0-7456-5613-7.
  5. ^ a b The International Encyclopedia of Sexuality: China, Homoerotic, Homosexual, and Ambisexual Behaviors Archived 2012-05-27 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Walker, Kathy Le Mon (July 1993). "Economic Growth, Peasant Marginalization, and the Sexual Division of Labor in Early Twentieth-Century China: Women's Work in Nantong County". Modern China. 19 (3): 354–386. doi:10.1177/009770049301900304. JSTOR 189349. S2CID 220739342.
  7. ^ Lau, M.P. (1995). "Review-Essays : Sex and Civilization in Modern China". Transcultural Psychiatric Research Review. 32 (2): 137–156. doi:10.1177/136346159503200202. S2CID 144698854.
  8. ^ Wu, Xiaogang (Spring 2013). "The Emerging New Middle Class and the Rule of Law in China". China Review. 13 (1): 43–70. JSTOR 23462228.
  9. ^ Song, Geng; Lee, Tracy K. (2010). "Consumption, Class Formation and Sexuality: Reading Men's Lifestyle Magazines in China". The China Journal. 64 (64): 159–177. doi:10.1086/tcj.64.20749251. JSTOR 20749251. S2CID 140530345.
  10. ^ Jeffreys, Elain (1997) Sex and Sexuality in China. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-40143-7
  11. ^ a b c The International Encyclopedia of Sexuality: China, Research and Advanced Education Archived 2012-05-27 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing, China – September 1995, Action for Equality, Development and Peace.
  13. ^ a b c The International Encyclopedia of Sexuality: China, Basic Sexological Premises Archived 2012-05-27 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ "China's Successful Ladies See Shrinking Pool of Mr. Right". Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  15. ^ "China to outlaw sexual harassment". BBC News. 27 June 2005. Retrieved 2012-10-07.
  16. ^ Li, Cao; South, Mark (27 October 2006). "Draft bill details sexual harassment". China Daily. Retrieved 2012-10-07.
  17. ^ Jeffreys, Elaine; Yu, Haiqing (2015). Sex in China. Cambridge UK: Polity. pp. 69–95. ISBN 9780745656137.
  18. ^ Jeffreys, Elaine; Yu, Haiqing (2015). Sex in China (1st ed.). Cambridge UK: Polity. pp. 69–95. ISBN 9780745656137.
  19. ^ a b Farrer, James (2002) Opening Up: Youth sex culture and market reform in Shanghai page 24. ISBN 0-226-23871-7
  20. ^ MacKinnon, Rebecca (2007). "Flatter world and thicker walls? Blogs, censorship and civic discourse in China". Public Choice. 134 (1–2): 31–46. doi:10.1007/s11127-007-9199-0. JSTOR 27698209. S2CID 154501423.
  21. ^ a b Zhen, Liu (May 21, 2010). "Jailed professor says orgies disturbed no one". Reuters. Retrieved 26 August 2010.
  22. ^ Taggart, Alex (12 April 2010). "Li Yinhe: In Defence of Professor Ma Xiaohai". ChinaGeeks. Archived from the original on 30 August 2010. Retrieved 29 May 2011.
  23. ^ "Chongqing "Sex Park" (Love Land) Dismantled for being Vulgar and Explicit". Chinahush.com. 17 May 2009. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  24. ^ "China Love Land: Sex Theme Park Demolished Before Debut". The Huffington Post. 18 June 2009.
  25. ^ "China builds first sex theme park". BBC News. May 16, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
  26. ^ McLaughlin, Kathleen E. (20 May 2009). "China sex park: "Love Land" is no Disneyland". GlobalPost. Archived from the original on 11 December 2015. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  27. ^ "China builds first sex theme park". ChannelNewsAsia. May 18, 2009. Archived from the original on January 19, 2013. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  28. ^ "Chinese Sex Theme Park Knocked Down After Photos Released". Fox News. 2009-05-18.
  29. ^ Wong, Edward (2009-05-18). "Chinese City Is Chilly to a Sex Theme Park". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
  30. ^ a b c The International Encyclopedia of Sexuality: China, HIV/AIDS Archived 2012-05-27 at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ Cao, Jin; Lu, Xinlei (2014). "A Preliminary Exploration of the Gay Movement in Mainland China: Legacy, Transition, Opportunity, and the New Media". Signs. 39 (4): 840–848. doi:10.1086/675538. S2CID 146296136.