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Revision as of 06:59, 20 September 2019 by FeanorStar7 (talk | contribs) (→References: add sort tag and cats)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Zhang Jingsheng (1888–1970) was a Chinese intellectual, author, and sexologist. He is remembered as one of the first academics in Chinese history to openly discuss sex. He is known as China’s "Dr Sex."
Family and early life
Zhang Jingsheng was born into a poor family in Raoping County, Guangdong Province in 1888.
From 1912 to 1920 he studied in France earning a bachelors degree in liberal arts and a PhD in Philosophy from the University of Lyon.
Career
After returning to China from France he taught at the Shantou Jinshan Middle School in Guangdong. In 1921 he was offered a teaching position at Peking University by Cai Yuanpei which put him at the very heart of the May Fourth movement.
Much of his work, both academic and professional, was regarded as tawdry or profane by Chinese conservatives and these forces were particularly powerful in Beijing. Zhang Jingsheng came under such fierce personal and professional attack that he attempted suicide by poison in 1932.
Over the course of his career he published books on science, medicine, philosophy, agronomy, logic, sociology, and literature. Zhang Jingsheng’s translation of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Confessions was one of the the most popular translations of its time in China.
Published works
- Sexual history (1926)
Biographies
- Sex, Eugenics, Aesthetics, Utopia in the Life and Work of Zhang Jingsheng (1888-1970) by Leon Antonio Rocha, 2010.
References
- ^ Kevin P. Murphy, Jennifer M. Spear and (2011). Historicising Gender and Sexuality. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 1444343939.
- ^ Wang, Jing M. (2008). When "I" was Born: Women's Autobiography in Modern China. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0299225100.
- Wang, Y. Yvon (2014). "Whorish Representation: Pornography, Media, and Modernity in Fin-de-siècle Beijing". Modern China. 40 (4). doi:10.1177/0097700413499732.
- Rocha, Leon (2019). "A Small Business of Sexual Enlightenment: Zhang Jingsheng's "Beauty Bookshop", Shanghai 1927-1929". British Journal of Chinese Studies. 9 (2). Retrieved 19 September 2019.
- Antonio Rocha, Leon (2010). Sex, Eugenics, Aesthetics, Utopia in the Life and Work of Zhang Jingsheng (1888-1970). University of Cambridge.