Sex Education
Categories
- Education
- Entertainment
- Erotica
- Fetish
- Foreplay
- GLBT
- Health
- Humor
- Law
- Lifestyle
- News
- Opinion
- Relationships
- Sex Toys
- Sex Toys Blog
Archives
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
Tags
Recent Comments
- Delicious Desires: Top Products for Oral Sex | dairyskin.com on Delicious Desires: Top Products for Oral Sex
- Fantasy-Pleasures on Kissing Tips for Your New Year’s Celebration
- Hot babe grabs stud’s crotch on Keep Your BDSM Toys Looking New
- Master and his two female sexual prisoners on Keep Your BDSM Toys Looking New
- Ebony sub’s tits clamped on Keep Your BDSM Toys Looking New
Members
As Seen On Dr. Ruth.com
Reviews
Generation Sex: China’s Sexual Revolution
June 18, 2008

China + sex revolution are hot buzz words lately, with topics about China’s sex-culture flooding the internet. Once controversial subjects like promiscuity, homosexuality, prostitution, AIDS, abortion, pornography and masturbation would have be taboo in China. They are now the focus of passionate public debate. One documentary, China’s Sexual Revolution (2007) that first aired on CBC takes a covert look as the slumbering giant’s libido awakens.
The documentary opens with a scene of young people necking in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, only two decades after the massacre. This liberalization of a new sexual freedom is the result of various determining factors including modernization, urbanization, China’s “one child policy”, women’s liberation, and a half a century of Maoist sexual repression and conform.
Chairman Mao—leader of the PRC from 1949 until his death in 1976—was mainly responsible for making sex a taboo. Under Mao’s dictatorship, it became mandatory for everyone to wear the unisex Mao suits which concealed a women’s curves and transformed lovers into androgynous comrades. Sex was to be performed as a reproductive duty only. Citizen’s private lives were also extremely restricted, resulting in loveless, sexless marriages.
Shortly after Mao’s death, the “one child policy” was introduced in China in 1979 as a form of “population control” in an attempt to alleviate social and environmental problems. This policy has had distinct effects on China’s social structure. It liberated women from their reproductive responsibility allowing them to pursue higher education and careers. However, it has resulted in an unbalanced ratio of men to women, with an estimated population of 30 million more men to women by 2020.
China now has the fastest growing sex trade in the world with roughly 10-20 million sex workers. Schoolgirls are being lured into the sex trade at karaoke clubs, while prostitution is widespread in bars, beauty salons, brothels and concubine villages. An AIDS epidemic is sweeping the nation as well, with approximately 200 people infected daily, and an estimated 10 million people to be infected by 2010. According to the China Family Planning Association premarital sex, pregnancy and abortions are all on the rise, especially among high school girls. Many educators have blamed outdated sex education, with people uninformed about birth control. Xu Tianming, the president of China Sexology Society, says that sexual ignorance outnumbers illiteracy.
Leading sexologists, like Pan Suiming, from the Sex Museum near Shanghai where visitors can view 1500 artifacts from China’s 9000 years of sexual history. Liu also shows his collection at Hong Kong’s first nude photo contest to take place and soft-core porn to be published in magazines. This is just the latest sign that sex is infiltrating the mainstream media. And, although the government is trying to eliminate online porn, much of it still falls through the cracks.
Muzi Mei is a sex blogger who became an instant celebrity in 2003 when she posted audio erotica of her own lovemaking on her blog. The podcast was downloaded by more than 50,000 people at once, crashing the server. She has since become a role model and characterizes the sexual attitudes of contemporary Chinese women.
There is no doubt that China is undergoing a sexual revolution. But, they still have a long way to go as far as public education. While 60-70% of Chinese have had pre-marital sex, only 20% of the men know where to find the clitoris and just 50% of the women have ever experienced an orgasm. One thing, however is for certain: Sex—China’s great taboo—is back out in the open.
Domina Doll is a sex writer who writes articles and reviews for various magazines, zines and adult toy stores. Visit her sexuality blog CherryBoxxx at http://cherryboxxx.blogspot.com/.
1 Comment »
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

[...] Generation Sex: China’s Sexual Revolution Filed under: female sexuality, sex & politics, sex articles — dominadoll @ 1:24 pm Tags: AIDS, audio erotica, cbc, china, documentary, muzimei, podcast, prostitution, revolution, sex, women’s liberation I am now writing articles for blog.vibrator.com and Vibrator.com. My first article is up, Generation Sex: China’s Sexual Revolution, which explores a CBC documentary called China’s Sexual Revolution. It explores China’s sex trade and various issues that are arising from their sexual awakening including AIDS, homosexuality, pornography, pregnancy, promiscuity, prostitution in hong kong and shanghai. It also features women’s liberation and popular sex blogger muzi mei who podcast her audio orgasm on the internet. Check it out. [...]
Pingback by Generation Sex: China’s Sexual Revolution « Cherry Boxxx — June 23, 2008 @ 10:38 am