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{{Infobox book
#REDIRECT ]
| image = File:Sex Histories Volume I Cover, 1926.png

| author = ]
{{Redirect category shell|
| pub_date = May 1926
{{R from book}}
| name = Sex Histories Part I
| country = ]
| genre = Nonfiction
| publisher = Beijing Eugenics Society
}} }}

'''''Sex Histories Part 1''''' ({{zh|t=性史第一輯|p=Xìngshǐ dìyījí|first=t|labels=no}}, often simply called ''Sex Histories'', {{zh|t=性史|p=Xìngshǐ |first=t|labels=no}}) is a 1926 book by Chinese philosopher and sexologist ].{{sfn|Rocha|2010|pp=120–136}}

On 2 February 1926, Zhang published an article in the Beijing periodical '']'' titled "The Best Pastime for a Winter Vacation: An Announcement for the Colleagues of the Eugenics Society", soliciting detailed stories of readers' sexual experiences. Zhang claimed to have received over two hundred submissions from this advertisement. Seven were featured in the book, with Zhang analyzing and commenting on them as case studies.{{sfn|Rocha|2010|pp=120–136}}{{sfn|Peng|2002|pp=159–167}}

The book caused widespread scandal upon its release in May 1926. Sales were extremely high for an academic book in the period. Large numbers of pirated copies boosted its circulation beyond the initially small print runs. Educational institutions such as ] attempted to ban the book, but such bans backfired and resulted in more students seeking out the book.{{sfn|Rocha|2010|pp=120–136}}{{sfn|Peng|2002|pp=159–167}}

A large number of unauthorized parodies and knock-offs of ''Sex Histories'' were produced by various authors following the book's release, many of which were brazenly pornographic parodies or excerpts from earlier erotic texts. Zhang Jingsheng himself was credited as the author of all of these supposed sequels and editions of ''Sex Histories'', resulting in significant confusion among the general public on which books were actually produced by Zhang.{{sfn|Rocha|2010|pp=120–136}}{{sfn|Peng|2002|pp=159–167}}
==References==
{{reflist}}
===Works cited===
{{Refbegin}}
*{{cite book|last=Peng|first=Hsiao-yen|title= Feminism/Femininity in Chinese Literature|editor-first1=Peng-hsiang|editor-last1=Chen|editor-first2=Whitney Crothers|editor-last2=Dilley|date=2002|isbn= 9789042007277|doi=10.1163/9789004333987_012|pages=159–177|chapter=Sex Histories: Zheng Jingsheng's Sexual Revolution|publisher=]|editor-link2=Whitney Crothers Dilley}}
*{{cite thesis|first=Leon Antonio|last=Rocha|title=Sex, Eugenics, Aesthetics, Utopia in the Life and Work of Zhang Jingsheng (1888–1970)|degree=PhD|publisher=]|date=2010}}
*{{cite book|first=Leon Antonio|last=Rocha|chapter=Translation and Two "Chinese Sexologies": ''Double Plum'' and ''Sex Histories''|title=Sexology and Translation: Cultural and Scientific Encounters across the Modern World|publisher=]|date=2015|isbn=9781439912508|oclc=919612519}}
{{refend}}

Revision as of 08:01, 13 January 2025

Sex Histories Part I
AuthorZhang Jingsheng
GenreNonfiction
PublisherBeijing Eugenics Society
Publication dateMay 1926
Publication placeRepublican China

Sex Histories Part 1 (性史第一輯; Xìngshǐ dìyījí, often simply called Sex Histories, 性史; Xìngshǐ) is a 1926 book by Chinese philosopher and sexologist Zhang Jingsheng.

On 2 February 1926, Zhang published an article in the Beijing periodical Jingbao Fukan titled "The Best Pastime for a Winter Vacation: An Announcement for the Colleagues of the Eugenics Society", soliciting detailed stories of readers' sexual experiences. Zhang claimed to have received over two hundred submissions from this advertisement. Seven were featured in the book, with Zhang analyzing and commenting on them as case studies.

The book caused widespread scandal upon its release in May 1926. Sales were extremely high for an academic book in the period. Large numbers of pirated copies boosted its circulation beyond the initially small print runs. Educational institutions such as Peking University attempted to ban the book, but such bans backfired and resulted in more students seeking out the book.

A large number of unauthorized parodies and knock-offs of Sex Histories were produced by various authors following the book's release, many of which were brazenly pornographic parodies or excerpts from earlier erotic texts. Zhang Jingsheng himself was credited as the author of all of these supposed sequels and editions of Sex Histories, resulting in significant confusion among the general public on which books were actually produced by Zhang.

References

  1. ^ Rocha 2010, pp. 120–136.
  2. ^ Peng 2002, pp. 159–167.

Works cited