Description:
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The book explores issues of sex and sexuality in a non-western context by examining debates surrounding the emergence of new sexual behaviours, and the appropriate nature of their regulation, in China. The nine chapters are marked by a diversity of subject materials and theoretical perspectives, but turn on three related concerns. First, the book situates China's changing sexual culture, and the nature of its governance, in the socio-political history of the PRC. Second, it shows how China's shift to a rule of law has generated conflicting conceptions of citizenship and the associated rights of individuals as sexual citizens. Finally, the book demonstrates that the Chinese state does not operate strictly to repress 'sex'; it also is implicated in the creation of new spaces for sexual entrepreneurship, expertise and consumption. |