The Culture of Sex in Ancient ChinaUniversity of Hawaii Press, 2001年10月31日 - 544 頁 The subject of sex was central to early Chinese thought. Discussed openly and seriously as a fundamental topic of human speculation, it was an important source of imagery and terminology that informed the classical Chinese conception of social and political relationships. This sophisticated and long-standing tradition, however, has been all but neglected by modern historians. In The Culture of Sex in Ancient China, Paul Rakita Goldin addresses central issues in the history of Chinese attitudes toward sex and gender from 500 B.C. to A.D. 400. |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 31 筆
... commentators point out that Chiang and Tzu are the surnames of the rulers of Ch'i and Sung, respectively.5 The point here seems to be that there are other fish in the river. Just as one must be willing to eat fishes other than bream and ...
... commentators, incapable of seeing the simple natural beauties of the poems, which have furnished endless household words and a large stock of phraseology to the language of the present day,... set to work to read into country-side ...
... commentators did not feel that one had understood a poem in the Odes until one could elucidate its moral significance—and for poems like “The Crafty Youth,” fulfilling that mission requires a liberal dose of creative reading. But ...
... commentators, such as Ma Jui-ch'en (here “waking and sleeping”) to mean “dreaming and sleeping”; that is to say, he fantasizes about the fine girl in his bed at night. And how can we forget what the horses are doing in the poem that ...
... commentators generally take to mean “gorgeous robes,” can readily mean, “lewdly she longs for it.” Fu, we remember, appears in “The Kuan-ing Ospreys” as one of the verbs describing the lover's nocturnal agitation. The , next two lines ...
內容
1 | |
8 | |
2 Women and Sex Roles | 48 |
3 Sex Politics and Ritualization in the Early Empire | 75 |
Privacy and Other Revolutionary Notions at the End of the Han | 111 |
Notes | 123 |
Bibliography | 193 |
Index | 225 |
About the Author | 232 |