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Xing: The Discourse of Sex and Human Nature in Modern China

journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-01, 11:02 authored by Leon Rocha
<p>In Modern Chinese, xing is the character most commonly used to denote sex, gender and sexuality. However, the character was a specialist Confucian term originally meaning ‘human nature’ in Classical Chinese, and only came to signify both sex and human nature in the early twentieth century. This usage was invented by Japanese intellectuals in the late nineteenth century for their translations of sexological texts from Europe, in which they encountered the concept of sex as a natural drive and the fundamental core of individuals. This article investigates the convoluted linguistic career of xing, and argues that in China in the 1920s, sex/xing became the point of anchorage for a new politics, which naturalised sex, legitimised talk about reproduction and desire, and made imperative the intensification of the production of scientific knowledge on sex (and by extension ‘human nature’). It is emphasised that the history of xing in China in the 1920s is not just a curiosity or appendage to more ‘mainstream’ history of sexuality; rather, it is impossible to appreciate the global nature of modernity without a thorough understanding of the circulation of sexual ideas.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Humanities and Heritage (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Gender & History

Volume

22

Issue

3

Pages/Article Number

603-628

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

0953-5233

eISSN

1468-0424

Date Submitted

2019-02-15

Date Accepted

2010-10-22

Date of First Publication

2010-10-22

Date of Final Publication

2010-10-22

Date Document First Uploaded

2019-02-13

ePrints ID

34980