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Winner of The USA Best Books 2011 Awards and The 2011 Reader Views Literary Awards, Making a Meal of It shines a revealing light on contemporary sexual understandings, mores, and behaviours in Chinese and Western societies. Based on twenty years of original comparative research, this book argues that embedded meanings of sex remain fundamentally different between the two cultures¿despite decades of loosening premarital sexual mores in China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan that appear to be converging with those in the West. Through surveys, focus groups, in-depth interviews and the study of cultural…mehr

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Winner of The USA Best Books 2011 Awards and The 2011 Reader Views Literary Awards, Making a Meal of It shines a revealing light on contemporary sexual understandings, mores, and behaviours in Chinese and Western societies. Based on twenty years of original comparative research, this book argues that embedded meanings of sex remain fundamentally different between the two cultures¿despite decades of loosening premarital sexual mores in China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan that appear to be converging with those in the West. Through surveys, focus groups, in-depth interviews and the study of cultural artefacts, Dr Jui-shan Chang finds that the Chinese primarily understand sex as a ¿meal for sustenance¿, while Westerners relate to sex as a ¿game¿ for individual recognition, validation, and completion. In the West sex is not what you do but rather who you are; for Chinese, sex is not who you are but what you döin relation to familial duties. Emerging out of those differences the author has developed a unique and profound perspective on sex that spans the two cultures. Making a Meal of It explores: * Why the conventional, Western perspective of modernization is inadequate in understanding Chinese sexuality * How a cross-cultural, sociological approach can locate Western and Chinese sexual practices at a more fundamental level * How ¿recognition¿ closely tied to sex in the contemporary West is crucial to understanding the predicaments of self and relationships * The notion of a trans-cultural wisdom bank, a repository of possible solutions to recurrent problems in sex and relationships faced by individuals from all cultures A sweeping and ambitious effort, Making a Meal of It: Sex in Chinese and Western Cultural Settings is a major contribution with implications for how we understand sex, self identity, gender roles, relationships, marriage, family and culture. Jui-shan Chang holds bachelor¿s and master¿s degrees in sociology from National Taiwan University, and a doctorate in sociology from the University of Michigan. She has worked as an academic for the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan, the East-West Centre in Hawaii, the University of Tasmania, the University of Iowa, and the University of Melbourne. A contributor to top journals and presses around the world and an award winning educator in Australia, she is currently also a psychotherapist in private practice and a freelance senior research consultant in Melbourne.
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