china

By: Michael Washburn

“It’s not the cheating, it’s the lying”—or so goes our national post-affair mantra. But of course, it’s the cheating. The cheating is the lying, as much as it’s the sex. (If you aren’t lying, you’re not cheating: You’re swinging.) We know the distinction between the physical act of sex and the illocutionary act of lying is false, yet this is the first line in the last act of every American domestic tragedy. It’s what betrayed spouses are supposed to say when confronted with their wayward partners, and it sets the stage for scenes filled with apology, contrition and, oddly, the detailed recitation of each liaison. It’s like this everywhere, right?

Lust in Translation: The Rules of Infidelity from Tokyo to Tennessee, former Wall Street Journal reporter Pamela Druckerman’s witty, engaging exploration of comparative infidelity, answers this question with an emphatic No. Every country has its adulterers—some more than others—but each culture’s cuckoldry has a flair all its own.

“Infidelity,” Ms. Druckerman writes, “isn’t just ubiquitous, it’s revealing.” From the status-anxious cafés of the Upper East Side to Moscow’s bureaucratic institutes of sexology to the stimulacra of Tokyo’s “pervert trains,” she exposes styles of infidelity as varied as the names used to describe them—“going strange,” “pinching the cat in the dark,” “a tied-up mare eats, too,” “standing in two boats at once.” Ms. Druckerman dramatizes the desire-driven lives of, among others, Williamsburg’s frustrated Hasidim, Indonesia’s bored wives and the torpid yi lais who inhabit China’s concubine villages. (more…)

dita2 Educating Dita (Via the Telegraph)

She is newly single, and keen to set the record straight. Dita Von Teese, the world’s most glamorous ‘demure stripper’, speaks frankly for the first time about the lessons she’s learnt from life with – and without – the shock-rocker Marilyn Manson

The world around Dita Von Teese may be on fire with speculation about her impending divorce from the ‘death rocker’ Marilyn Manson after just over a year of marriage – not to mention the feverish, vampire-themed courtship that Manson is rumoured to be having with a young actress – but you’d never know it to look at her.

Sitting on a sofa at the Chateau Marmont hotel in Los Angeles, with big diamond bracelets stacked up on her bird-like wrists and her long blue-black hair moulded carefully around her supernaturally white cleavage, Von Teese, 34, looks more like some rare collectable china doll than an actual person. It’s almost a surprise when she turns her head and speaks.

But speak she does. Demurely and cautiously at first, but later with raw, clear-eyed sadness and startling frankness about the demise of her five-year relationship with the absinthe-drinking ‘Anti-Christ Superstar’ and his party-hard lifestyle that she says drove them apart.

Up until now the wasp-waisted Von Teese has been almost as famous for her coy, ladylike discretion as she has for bathing on stage in a crystal-studded champagne glass. Indeed, Von Teese – who earned almost £500,000 last year and is recognised as the most celebrated burlesque dancer in the world – initially agreed to be interviewed on the condition that I not ask her about Manson or the divorce. But a week after our first meeting she calls me late at night from Seoul, Korea, and says she has changed her mind.

‘I want to set the record straight about some things,’ says Von Teese, who has just read the April issue of Rolling Stone magazine, in which Manson talks about both the ‘black hole of depression’ he experienced while married to her, and the new love who inspired his forthcoming album. Von Teese’s voice is high and quivering with emotion. ‘Some things have been said about my marriage that are not fair, and I want to respond.’

(Read more…)

feet Two stories about Feet Binding
Radio and photo essays about footbinding survivors who live in Liuyicun village, Yunnan Province, China:

Painful Memories for China’s Footbinding Survivors (NPR):
“Suffering for beauty is a concept familiar to most women, who have dyed, plucked or shaved their hair, squeezed their feet into uncomfortable high heels or even surgically enhanced parts of their anatomy. Millions of Chinese women went even further — binding their feet to turn them into the prized “three-inch golden lotuses.”"

Feet Binding (Yahoo)

…With full acknowledgement that men’s tastes in women are as unpredictable as the plotline of “24,” these are some of things that many men value in “the one.”

A Woman with a Passion in Something Other Than Him
Yes, it’s nice to be doted over. Yes, it’s nice to be pampered. Yes, it’s nice to be with a woman who showers you with compliments, neck kisses, and all of her attention. But there’s a virtual Great Wall of China between a fleeting, flirtatious glance and the kind of attraction that can last a lifetime. Many men say they like a woman who’s immersed in something else other than the relationship — be it her work, or her sport, or whatever her “thing” is. Why? The passion she shows for something else confirms her inherent goodness, her personal drive, her independence. All pluses in the woman we’re hoping to spend a few decades with.

When Sports Illustrated’s swimsuit issue hit the newsstands in China for the first time, with sexy singer Beyoncé on the cover, the competition was fierce.

Readers here had already seen the February issue of For Him Magazine, which features a Chinese singer named A Duo posing like a dominatrix, clutching her breasts, wrapping her naked body in celluloid and bending, sweat-drenched, over a submissive man.

China’s racy FHM also offers tips on “how to do it in five minutes” (because a “sex break is the same as a coffee break”) and features stories with titles like “The Dangerous Sex Journey of QiQi.”

The images and text would hardly be shocking to Western readers. And the photographs are tame compared with what appears in magazines in Japan and other parts of Asia.

But in China, where pornography is outlawed by the ruling Communist party, the images are not only highly provocative but perhaps the latest sign that sex and sexuality are infiltrating the mainstream media.

And this powerful burst of sexual energy seems both a symbol of how rapidly China’s transformation is unfolding and, to some, a harbinger of the troubles ahead for a nation that will inevitably struggle to absorb its newfound freedoms.

“There is a fine line between the open mind and sexual indulgence,” says Xie Xialing, a professor of sociology at Fudan University in Shanghai.

Even five years ago, Chinese books and magazines were banned from showing pictures of scantily clad models or publishing content deemed to be offensive or morally corrupt. The only sexual content to be found was in sex-education pamphlets or photo books of nude Chinese women sold as “art works” at big-city airports.

Today, however, with China’s economy booming and the government loosening its hold on the personal lives of everyday citizens, magazines are beginning to publish soft-core pornographic photographs, sexual fantasies, even clues about where to pick up call girls.

(Read more…)

…When you look at the phthalate issue in a larger context, what you see is the current split within the sex toy industry between old-school adult novelty makers and new age sex-positive toy companies. The former are stuck in a model of “get it as cheap as you can from China, make it look like a penis (that’s what women want, right?), and spend as little as you can on packaging.” Toys from these companies scream, “Who cares if this looks good or actually works? No one’s going to return it or complain, they’ll be too embarrassed. Besides, it’s just a dildo,” reinforcing people’s low expectations and shame. Nick Orlandino, chief operating officer of Pipedream Products, recently told Adult Novelty Business, “Most of our customers don’t give a shit what their toy is made of.” This gag-gift mentality treats its products, and by extension sexual pleasure and satisfaction, as frivolous and unimportant.

(more…)

p1a Chinese New Years: Year of the PigPhoto: Jason Lee/Reuters

Sunday, Feb. 18th begins the Lunar New Year. In Chinese astrology, this is the year of the Pig (Ding Hai).

According to this site, Pig years are known for their respite from strife, patience and passivity, but also for indulgence, sensuality and fleshly delights. I don’t know about that. My sister was born in a Pig year and I’m the sensualist of the two of us.

Also this year is the Year of the Golden Pig, a doubly propitious period thanks to a combination of animals and elements in the Chinese zodiac that matches pigs and gold only once every 60 years.

It’s especially auspicious to bear children in a Pig Year. The coming baby boom is such a concern, population authorities in China are calling on young couples to think through all of the implications of having a child in 2007 before making a decision.

Sunday, I’ll be in Chinatown, eating a fresh whole fish, noodles, and fried spring rolls, all auspicious foods, whose meaning or Chinese names sound like a Chinese characters for fortune, happiness, longevity and prosperity. I’ll bring orange (symbolic of wealth) when I visit friends.

KUNG HEI FAT CHOI! (Happy New Year!)

Link

…”PHE/A&E is currently cutting out all sex toys that contain phthalates. This process takes time because a large majority of the products we sell come from China. However, the merchandisers are requiring that all toys be phthalate-free. By mid 2007, PHE companies (Adam & Eve, Better Sex, AdamMale, VideoMail, Video Gold, Temptations Parties, etc) should also be phthalate-free. I am keeping my eye on this as much as I can.”

(more…)

I Fucked Che Guevara

by Holiday on 12/27/2006

in sex

In the past four years, I have seen Che Guevara in Manama, Dubai, Athens, Venice, Rome, Milan, Wurzburg, Munich, Salzburg, Paris and London.

In every city, the hero of the Cuban Revolution – the former doctor from Argentina, stares at me from T-shirts, baseball caps, neck ties, coffee mugs, posters, and jingles at the end of cheesy key rings made in China.

Che is with me – everywhere I go.

Che is standing on a crowded corner of La Rambla in Barcelona.

Che is strolling along a narrow street of Cambridge.

Che is at the foot of my bed, watching me being intimate with my wife.

I remember when Che is murdered in the jungles of Bolivia on October 9, 1967. This marks the end of a summer that begins with the release of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Band on June 1.

That fall Che is a Christ-like figure laid out on a bed of death – after allegedly uttering those fearless last words: “Shoot, coward, you’re only going to kill a man.”

Che is forever young at age 39.

We love the story about a hero who embarks on a journey of enlightenment and returns to the world of his birth with the gift of immortality.

“¿Cómo es usted, Che?” I ask.

“Muy bueno,” he answers. “¿Y usted?”

Now Che seems more handsome than the image of the socialist heartthrob in his beret.

We invite Che to join us – me and my wife, that is. He surrounds us like air.

“Comrade, forget your martyrdom and allow yourself the pleasures of the flesh.”

“Gracias, mis amigos,” the ultimate poster boy of revolutionary chic says.

We beckon Che, as he beckons us in the iconic image of Alberto Korda, the Cuban artist who took what may be the most famous photograph in the world.

Our threesome is so perfectly natural.

El Comandante is hungry for sexual passion.

Wearing a smile of melancholy sweetness, Che takes my wife with animal energy. I watch as she is left exhausted and panting from his enthusiasm.

It turns out that Che is bisexual. After all, the Revolution proclaims a ferocious love for one another – and Che the romantic is always present to struggle against oppression and tyranny.

Banished are all those unpleasant accusations that Che – the university trained physician, the humanitarian, the freedom lover, the great revolutionary firebrand – sent 1,897 men to the firing squad during the first year of the Castro regime.

Mistakes happen.

Then it is my turn to be with Che, and he moans like an excited whore.

Link

200611150032 69923 Sex expos gaining popularity in China
From NewsGD.com:

Encouraged by the success of the fourth Guangzhou Sex Culture Expo, held earlier this month, family planning officials from Liaoning, Beijing and Shanghai have promised to follow suit.

Altogether 500,000 visitors visited the expo from November 4-6, ten times the number for the first such event in 2003.

An official with the State Population and Family Planning Commission heralded the expo as an opportunity for the general public to learn about sex, health and science.

Population and family planning officials from Liaoning, Beijing and Shanghai attending a symposium on population in Beijing, said they would travel to Guangdong to visit the fair. They hope to sponsor similar sex fairs in their own areas next year.

Foreign participants attending the symposium said the fourth Guangzhou sex fair helps promote sexual awareness and a code of sexual conduct.

“The fair reflects the development of Chinese society and is laudable,” they said.

Beijing and Shanghai had planned to organize sex expos in the past but the events were called off because of negative publicity.

Though Chinese attitudes towards sex have become more liberal in recent decades, many people are still conservative about sex.

When the fourth Guangzhou sex culture expo opened on November 4, some netizens dismissed it as “morally decadent” or a “legalized sex show”.

“Culture is simply a cloak for a sexual display,” said one netizen.

“Why do we have to mimic westerners with their obsession about sex,” said another netizen, “conservative attitudes about sex are fitting and proper for Asian people and part of the graciousness of oriental life”.

Health authorities in Harbin are under attack for providing safe-sex lectures to prostitutes, with police and some residents of the city arguing the sermons give legitimacy to the illegal profession.

The disease prevention and control center of Harbin, capital of northeastern China’s Heilongjiang Province, organized a lecture last Wednesday on AIDS and safe sex for more than 50 women involved in the city’s sex trade, according to the Harbin Daily.

The two-hour lecture covered AIDS prevention, the importance of using a condom and how to use one properly, and for the first time allowed the sex workers to discuss their occupation openly.

After the activity, the center staff also distributed boxes of condoms to the attendees for free, and gave them the center’s phone number in case they have questions or problems in the future. (more…)

o aids china 2 "If men does not use a condom, women will suffer"
An aids education ad sponsored by a Taiwanese foundation.

How did they get the condom on the snake?!

[via Nerve Scanner]

September 1–16, 2006

Part Two concludes the series that brings together a broad palette of international Queer Cinema produced since the late 1980s—a wide range of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender film and media from North America and Western Europe, as well as less-available works from sub-Sahara Africa, India, Thailand, Holland, Bolivia, Mexico, Spain, and China. This new wave of queer filmmakers investigates cinematic form in relationship to the complexities of their sexual identities and the world in which they live, and continues to query the possibilities of film and media aesthetics.

See a schedule of screenings in Another Wave: Global Queer Cinema, Part Two