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Chapter Title: The Relationship between Chinese Erotic Art and the Art of the

Bedchamber: A Preliminary Survey


Chapter Author(s): Sumiyo Umekawa, 梅川純代 and David Dear

Book Title: Imagining Chinese Medicine


Book Editor(s): Vivienne Lo, 羅維前, Penelope Barrett, David Dear, Lu Di, 蘆笛, Lois
Reynolds, Dolly Yang and 楊德秀
Published by: Brill

Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1163/j.ctvbqs6ph.21

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15 The Relationship between Chinese Erotic Art and the Art of the Bedchamber:
A Preliminary Survey
Sumiyo Umekawa 梅川純代 and David Dear

This article will investigate the links between yangsheng Mimes).4 Besides exercise and breath control practices,
養生 (Nourishing Life) culture dating back to the Western yangsheng includes rules and principles for most aspects
Han dynasty (202 bce–9 ce) and the Ming/Qing era sex of daily life with particular concern for food, dietetics
illustrations (late 14th to early 20th century), as transmitted and sexology. Yangsheng in a broad sense still exerts a
through the discourse of fangzhong shu 房中術 (the Art powerful influence on the way ordinary people think
of the Bedchamber). From the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) about and manage their health to this day. However at
onwards, we see an efflorescence of Chinese erotic art, the time of its emergence as a distinct philosophy of life
such as that collected by Robert van Gulik in his 1951 book in the late Warring States era (4th and 3rd centuries bce),
Erotic Colour Prints of the Ming. Comparisons will be drawn it was, in the eyes of many, clearly connected with the
between the Japanese tradition of erotic art known as search for transcendence and immortality as practised
shunga 春畫 and the Chinese erotic art of chungong hua by the xian 仙 cults which flourished in practice until
春宮畫.1 The difference between these two genres high- the late Tang (618–907) – and in legend and literature ever
lights the latter’s continuing reference to the formulas of since. However from their inception, the philosophies and
the ancient sexology texts, while the former expresses a purposes of yangsheng, medicine and immortality cults
more directly pornographic2 approach to erotic imagery, were the subject of broad dispute. Works attributed to the
notwithstanding the availability in Japanese culture of the philosopher Zhuangzi 莊子 (4th century bce), have equiv-
same philosophy of sexual regimen as transmitted through ocal attitudes to the pursuit of immortality, both speaking
the Ishimpō 醫心方 (Formulas of the Heart of Medicine).3 of transcendence and mocking those who just stretch and
shake their bodies, while the Eastern Han sceptic, Wang
Chong 王充(27 ce–?100 ce), both mocked and criticised
Definitions and Background the xian immortality cults while acknowledging the value
of straightforward yangsheng.5
Yangsheng 養生 (Nourishing Life)
Yangsheng consists of a group of practices and literature Fangzhong Shu (The Art of the Bedchamber) and
aimed at enhancing the well-being of the practitioner. It Yangsheng (Nourishing Life)
does so through the operation of Qi 氣 within and without While the early yangsheng texts concerning sex and sex-
the body of the practitioner(s), and with particular refer- ual relations form a core part of the fangzhong shu, other
ence to Yin Yang philosophy. In the earliest known texts types of fangzhong shu texts also show the influence of the
dating from the Western Han, the discourse of yangsheng immortality cults, early Daoist rituals, spiritual alchemy,6
merges seamlessly with the then emerging themes of and in early modern empire (Song dynasty, 960–1279 on-
Chinese medicine. The earliest recorded forms of yangsheng wards), the impact of works published simply to titillate
physical exercises, called daoyin 導引 (Guiding and Pulling and entertain as the printing and publishing industries
[of Qi]), are the forerunners of modern Qigong and Taiji grew and flourished. Thus while yangsheng concerns itself
quan, together with a number of other longstanding exer- with many things besides sexology, fangzhong shu covers
cise practices like the wuqin xi 五禽戲 (The Five Animal a wider range of sexual practices than those prescribed by
yangsheng. The various sexual theories from the realms
of medicine, yangsheng, fangzhong shu, Daoism and other
1 春畫 shunga lit. = ‘Spring pictures’. 春宮 chungong (lit. ‘Spring religio-spiritual cults all operated over the centuries in a
palace’) in Chinese can refer to a prince’s palace – and is also a climate of mutual influence around a common vocabulary
term for erotica. of Qi and its defining operational philosophies. However, as
2 The term ‘pornography’ is a problematic one in relation to Asian
sexual culture since it is essentially a reflection of Western sexu-
al taboos, or alternatively a way of critiquing the ‘morality’ of the 4 For more on wuqin xi, see Wang and Barrett 2006.
‘other’. Here it is simply used as shorthand to denote the most 5 Wang Chong (27–97 ce) Lun heng 16.
directly explicit sexual imagery. See Screech 1999, pp. 13–38. 6 Both waidan 外丹 (External, chemical, alchemy) and neidan 內
3 The great 10th-century Japanese compendium of Chinese medi- 丹 (Internal, spiritual, alchemy).
cal texts. See detailed discussion below.

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216 sumiyo umekawa 梅川純代 and dear

with yangsheng practices and the xian immortality cults, detailed prescriptions are given for the types, sequences
while there is a substantial overlap between yangsheng and numbers of penetrations the man should make and the
and fangzhong shu, the two categories are nonetheless various positions in which they can be achieved. Ejaculation
separate and distinguishable, the more so as time goes on.7 control is the key technique that the male needs to apply
to his own body.
Basic Principles of Yangsheng Sexology But as Donald Harper makes clear in a discussion of the
Yangsheng sexual techniques have a series of interlinked aphrodisiac recipes and philtres found at Mawangdui 馬
and clearly defined objectives: 王堆, Dunhuang 敦煌 and in the Ishimpō,11 the case for
to sexually satisfy the female partner by bringing her to a pure tradition of esoteric sexual cultivation, completely
orgasm one or more times; divorced from normal human sexual desire and lust, is
to preserve the physical wellbeing of the male partner; hard to evidence. In later fangzhong shu works, the idea
to augment the physical and psychological health of the of augmenting male health becomes a ‘battle’ in which
male partner by absorbing female Yin Qi 陰氣; males seek to garner as much Yin energy from as many
to maximise the opportunities for the conception of partners as possible while not losing any of their own Yang
healthy male heirs; Qi. In this way, men can achieve immortality. This idea is
to allow the male partner to control conception; present in the Han dynasty in the legend of Peng Zu 彭祖,
to cure female ailments; the original master of fangzhong shu, who is supposed to
to establish and maintain social and domestic harmony have lived to 800 or 900 years through his skill in sexual
between a couple. cultivation. The legend is a clear expression of the influ-
The key concept is that the female partner is a potentially ence of the immortality cults. In other legends, and their
inexhaustible8 source of Yin Qi. Males by contrast are later corresponding popular stories, females are able to
always in danger of exhausting their supply of Yang Qi 陽 attain immortality through the seduction of multiple male
氣 by careless or wanton sexual behaviour, while their partners.12 Similarly in later Daoist practice, the principle
vital Yin Qi is constantly under threat of natural depletion. of non-ejaculation becomes huanjing bunao 還精補腦
Women are therefore inherently sexually stronger than (returning the sperm to nourish the brain) – the idea that
men. The highest form of female Yin Qi is released by a not only did the man not ejaculate, but that he was able to
woman at orgasm. This Yin Qi can be absorbed by the male conserve his jing 精 (essence) and guide it up to his brain.
to benefit his own health because his own inner organs This was in some cases regarded as a physical practice, in
require Yin Qi to nourish them, a process called gubai 固 others as a purely meditative one. In both cases, the aim
白 (consolidating white).9 was the achievement of spiritual immortality. Both the
The early yangsheng texts place the emphasis on the idea of ‘stealing’ Yin and that of an absolute prohibition
male partner’s ability to bring his companion to orgasm on ejaculation (as opposed to an enjoinder to restrict it to
through close observation of her behaviour and an ap- the minimum possible) can be considered as deviations
propriate response in his foreplay to take her to a higher from yangsheng, and in the eyes of the 5th-century ce
level of excitement.10 Once the woman is ready for coitus, Daoist physician and Patriarch Tao Hongjing 陶弘景,
the latter not only offends against true Daoism but also
against the Confucian ideal of xiao 孝 (filiality), in that one
7 Furth in Gilmartin et al. (eds) 1994, p. 133, notes the increasing
would thereby be depriving one’s parents and ancestors
criticism in yangsheng texts of ‘non yangsheng’ fangzhong shu
of descendants.
practices in the later empire.
8 Ibid. p. 134. Furth objects to this ‘inexhaustible’ idea, however
inexhaustibility does seem to be consistent with the ideas in the Ishimpō
early yangsheng texts, though they do also stress the need not to During the Tang dynasty (618–907), Japanese scholar monks
damage female health and/or Qi through mis-practice. travelled extensively in China, absorbing and recording all
9 The term gubai 固白 (consolidating white) appears in the fourth they could of Chinese culture. One product of this was the
and 10th dialogues of the text excavated from Mawangdui Tomb Ishimpō, compiled by Tamba no Yasuyori 丹波康頼 in 984
3 given the modern title of Shiwen (Ten Questions). Especially,
ce. It provides us with the most complete record of Chinese
the 10th dialogue explains the condition indicated by this term
in relation to the accumulation of Qi in the five internal organs:
Shiwen. p. 147, p. 152. 11 Harper 2005.
10 The text with the modern title He yinyang 合陰陽 (Uniting Yin 12 See Needham and Lu 1983, pp. 194–5 on the Xi Wang Mu 西王母
and Yang), also from Mawangdui Tomb no. 3 (dated to 168 bce), (Queen Mother of the West) and Ming novellas like the Zhulin
is one of the best examples of these techniques. See Harper 1998. yeshi 株林野史 (The Secret of the Bamboo Grove).

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the relationship between chinese erotic art and the art of the bedchamber 217

medicine at the time (as opposed to ­single-authored or where erotic imagery also survives amidst the fresco paint-
single author attributed texts), in addition to giving de- ings. The poem van Gulik relies upon is the Tiandi yinyang
tails of texts recorded in the dynastic histories but subse- jiaohuan dalefu 天地陰陽交歡大樂賦 (The Heaven and
quently lost or suppressed in the intervening centuries. A Earth, Yin and Yang Songs of Great Satisfaction in Sexual
number of the Ishimpō texts concern sexology and it was Pleasure, hereafter referred to as The Songs of Great
a re-translation of the Ishimpō into Chinese that inspired Satisfaction), which was possibly composed during the Tang
the late Qing scholar Ye Dehui 葉徳輝 (1864–1927) in his dynasty. He refers in particular to the line: ‘they read the
investigations into the ancient sexual arts in general. Canon of the Plain Girl and look at the erotic pictures on
Ishimpō remained the main source available in this field the holding screen’.16 Van Gulik clearly understands ‘the
until the recovery of the Han dynasty yangsheng sexology erotic pictures’ as depicting the contents of Sunü jing 素
texts in the tomb finds at Mawangdui and Zhangjiashan 女經 (The Canon of the Plain Girl). However, this reading
張家山 in the 1970s and 1980s. is open to question. Thus we would hesitate to accept van
Gulik’s and Liu’s suggestion that illustrated sex manuals
Shunga really did exist from ancient times.
Hayakawa Monta 早川聞多 defines Japanese erotic art, By the Ming Era the situation had changed radically. A
shunga, as follows: ‘It is the pictures and drawings that flourishing publishing industry produced numerous sala-
illustrate sexual intercourse, and various customs and cious stories. The Ming period also saw the composition
manners concerning sexual activities’.13 It can be taken to and first publication of the ‘secret’ masterpiece of Chinese
correspond to a large extent to the Chinese genre of sexual literature, Jinping mei 金瓶梅 (Golden Lotus, or lately in
imagery called chungong hua. These art works would now- David Roy’s modern translation, the more appropriately
adays be classified in English as erotica or pornography, suggestive Plum in the Golden Vase).17 Jinping mei is a savage
and the category contains images of all varieties of sexual and shockingly explicit picaresque novel, which satirises
activity, not least homosexual. For the purposes of this contemporary mores in great detail and which itself is seen
chapter, the authors will confine their comments to those as prefiguring the accepted pre-eminent masterpiece of
images that depict sexual activity between actors of the classical Chinese literature, Honglou meng 紅樓夢 (Dream
opposite sex. This is because yangsheng and fangzhong of Red Mansions), mid-18th century. It also finds echoes
shu texts only direct themselves explicitly to heterosexual in the mid-17th-century erotic satire Roupu tuan 肉蒲
relations or solo practices. The authors offer no comment 團 (The Carnal Prayer Mat, or ‘Bedclothes of Flesh’),18 in
as to whether the ideas and principles there enshrined which the hero, Weiyangsheng 未央生 (Vesperus), torn
could apply to same-sex relationships. Interestingly how- between spiritual and carnal quests, has his penis enlarged
ever, Screech in his discussion of Nanshoku 男色 cites the with the insertion of a dog’s sexual endowment, the better
idea in 15th –16th century Japan of men having sex only to pursue the latter path. Both Roupu tuan and Jinping
with other males as a means of retaining Yang Qi during mei make reference to the collections of erotic imagery
intercourse.14 available at that time. In the former, Vesperus buys a col-
lection of erotic art to give his wife, indicating that such
collections of erotic drawings could be freely bought in
The Images the marketplace. Two collections are mentioned by name:
Sanshi gongchun 三十宮春 (Thirty Palaces of Spring) in
While there are many talismanic or practical artefacts both Roupu tuan and Jinping mei, and Ershi si jie 二十四
which use sexual imagery or references from the pre-Song 解 (Twenty-four Descriptions) in Jinping mei.19 Shen Defu
eras, there are none associated directly with yangsheng 沈德符 (1578–1642), a leading intellectual of the Ming era,
or fangzhong shu texts. Both van Gulik and the modern also reported that erotic items including pictures were sold
Chinese scholar Professor Liu Dalian 劉達臨 posit the in many local shops.20
existence of ancient sex manuals with illustrations.15 As
evidence, van Gulik quotes a poem found at Dunhuang,
16 Tiandi yinyang jiaohuan dalefu (Ye Dehui 1995 edn), p. 102.
17 First published in 1610, but circulated in handwritten copies for
13 Shirakura and Hayakawa (eds) 2003, p. 14. several decades previously.
14 Screech, 1999, p. 84. However from this account, the concern for 18 Roupu tuan, attr. Li Yu 李漁 (1610–80), was composed in 1657
Yang Qi seems to stem from a sociological rather than physiolog- and published in 1693.
ical perspective. 19 Wu 2005, p. 156.
15 Van Gulik 1974 [1961], pp. 200–6; Liu 2003, p. 242. 20 Ibid., p. 155.

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218 sumiyo umekawa 梅川純代 and dear

Two Ming artists in particular, 仇英 (1500–60) and Tang subjects in general for export to the West. These included
Yin唐寅 (1470–1523), are believed to have created a great a considerable amount of erotic material.24
deal of erotic material. However, due to the anonymity It was also from the Ming era onwards that Japanese
of their working practice as well as the existence of large erotic illustrations, shunga, were imported into China,
number of forgeries, it is quite difficult to provide accu- where they were reportedly much sought after.25
rate attributions for each picture. According to Fukuda’s
福田 research, most hand-drawn pictures do not have a Chungong Hua and Fangzhong Shu
signature or seal and it is not possible to trace a publisher In her paper ‘Re-thinking van Gulik’, Charlotte Furth says:
for most of the printed drawings.21 Thus it is very difficult ‘In bedchamber manuals natural philosophy continues
not only to attribute but also to date much of the extant to frame the discussion of sex as a microscopic human
erotic art. Some writers of the Ming and Qing period report re-enactment of primary creative processes’.26 This is
the existence of wealthy women fond of producing erotic unequivocally true of some of the Han dynasty yangsheng
pictures,22 but most of the material would have been the sexology but must be open to question with regard to the
work of anonymous professional artists and artisans broader category of fangzhong shu that had opened up by
living in society at large. The idea of erotic painting as an the Ming era. The purposes of the texts had in many cases
aristocratic female art form would be consistent with the moved on, and not necessarily to a more elevated level.
hedonistic or decadent atmosphere attributed by many to The increasing sophistication of the medical discourse in
the Ming era. It would also be supported by the evidence the intervening centuries had stripped the texts of much
of the Jinping mei. However, it should be borne in mind of their didactic purpose. As we see from Sun Simiao’s
that the Qing historians have a vested interested in por- 孫思邈 (581–682) Qianjin yaofang 千金要方 (Essential
traying the preceding dynasty as degenerate. In fact from prescriptions worth 1,000 gold pieces) and the Ishimpō,
the evidence emerging from Liu Dalian’s research, erotic sexology for health had become incorporated into a specif-
and pornographic art proliferated as never before under ically medicalised discourse. On the other hand the Tang
the outwardly strait-laced Qing. The Qing sources are so dynasty has also been identified as the era in which an
extensive that the increase can hardly be attributed simply unashamedly recreational erotic literature starts to appear.
to the era’s relative historical proximity or to improved Thus in the Ming era we find erotic illustrations without
techniques of production. attached text and un-illustrated Bedchamber texts from
In the Ming, artefacts like silk paintings not amenable previous eras. Can any connection be made between them?
to mass production would have been costly and exclu- Roel Sterckx in his paper in this volume makes the val-
sive, while on the other hand, the line engravings used uable distinction between performative and illustrative
to illustrate the aforementioned erotic literature would images.27
have enjoyed a mass circulation. One might reasonably The former type consists of depictions that invite the ob-
assume that those high-production images would have server to actively invoke the image as part of a performance
been destined for limited circulation among officials and (e.g. an incantation, a healing procedure, a mnemonic act).
The latter comprises images that complement an existing
the wealthy merchant classes. Certainly this is van Gulik’s
narrative, mostly texts. While the performative image
view, but he believed that at the same time these images may be accompanied by explanatory texts, in principle,
also had considerable impact on ordinary society.23 In the text remains subsidiary to the image. In the case of the
case of the collections mentioned in Roupu tuan and Jinping illustrative image, the image offers a type of annotation
mei, they could often have formed part of the trousseau of or commentary to the text.
the well-to-do bride as an educational guide in what her
husband might expect of her. In the Qing dynasty high- The classic line illustrations that accompany the text of
er-quality images started to be produced on a systematic the Jinping mei are the most obvious example of this latter
basis, notably in the Guangdong area, where several art case. They are simply there to enhance the reader’s pleas-
studios established techniques for the manufacture of ure – and ensure that the published versions will appeal to
large quantities of colour prints and paintings on Chinese the widest possible market, including those who may not
be able to appreciate the full literary depth of the novel.

24 Nakano 2001, pp. 20, 22.


21 Fukuda 1981, p. 16. 25 Wu 2005, p. 158.
22 Liu 2003, p. 242. 26 Firth in Gilmartin et al. (eds) 1994, p. 133
23 Van Gulik, 1974, p. 332. 27 See Sterckx, Chapter 7 in this volume, p. 136.

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the relationship between chinese erotic art and the art of the bedchamber 219

Figure 15.1 ‘Pan Jinlian Enjoys a Midday Battle in the Bathtub’ Figure 15.2 ‘Nami Chidori’ 浪千鳥 by Katsushika Hokusai 葛飾北斎
(detail), from Jinping mei, ch. 29. Printed from an original (c. 1829). Source: Shirakawa and Hayakawa 2003, p. 162
woodblock of the Ming Chongzhen era (1627–44). Source:
Jinping mei, Taiping shuju edn, p. 740

However, many of the chungong hua can be said to have make up their faces in a unique manner to express the char-
some simple performative value by virtue of the fact that acteristics of the role they are playing and then exaggerate
most of us share basically recognisable bodily traits and a their actions to ensure the audience understands every
similar range of movements. The question is to what extent detail of emotion the character feels. A notable feature of
the images can be said or seen to comply with specifically Kabuki is mie 見得, which means to strike an impressive
yangsheng values, indicating a performative dimension that pose. Fukuda suggests that the exaggeration of genital
can connect them with fangzhong shu. In this regard, the organs comes from this aspect of Kabuki; stage techniques
contrast between chungong hua and shunga can be seen to entertain an audience are effectively lifted to another
to be illuminating. ‘stage’, that of erotic art.32 He further points out the fact
that male and female figures as well as male and female
Shunga and Chungong Hua organs in Japanese erotic art are placed symmetrically or
Besides use as pornography28 or instruction as to how to vertically. He calls such composition ‘combat style’ and re-
enjoy sexual relations,29 it is often noted that Japanese erot- gards it as derived from the stage arrangements in Kabuki.33
ic art served a humorous function.30 While much Chinese Equally Hayakawa observes that the degree of elabora-
erotic art could also have been intended for merriment, tion in the depictions of faces and genital organs is similar,
the styles of humour in Japanese and Chinese examples and that the faces and conjoined genitals are aligned in
are quite different. the composition.34 Thus this arrangement of figures and
One of the key key humorous mechanisms in Japanese sex organs is one of the special elements in Japanese erotic
shunga is exaggeration. As in Figure 2, male and female art and it further suggests the intensive nature of its focus.
sex organs are frequently depicted vividly and realistically, This type of exaggeration can also be related to the
but enlarged to an impossible size. This intense emphasis growing scientific interests of the Japanese in that era.35
on the penis and vagina can be related to the Japanese Erotic pictures as a part of ukiyo-e 浮世絵 (Pictures of the
orientation to the ‘close-up view’.31 Floating World) were enjoyed mainly by people living in and
In addition shunga reflects the influence of the Japanese around Edo, today’s Tokyo. Meanwhile parody books called
dramatic tradition of Kabuki 歌舞伎, which was particu- Tengōmonono 転合物 (Joke Goods) became popular in the
larly popular in the Edo period (1603–1867), when much west of Japan. Such joke books usually imitated didactic,
Japanese erotic art was produced. In a Kabuki play, actors moralistic or medical texts in common circulation. Japan

28 Screech 1999, pp. 13–38. 32 Fukuda 2003, p. 92.


29 See for instance, Shirakura and Hayakawa 2003, p. 16. 33 Ibid., pp. 88, 90.
30 Ibid., p. 16; Fukuda 2003, p. 90. 34 Shirakura and Hayakawa 2003, p. 16.
31 Nakano 2001, p. 7, pp.16–18, p. 36. 35 Screech 1999, pp. 216–28.

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220 sumiyo umekawa 梅川純代 and dear

at that time was receiving Dutch medical ideas including However the key to connecting any performative attrib-
anatomical knowledge. Under this Dutch influence, these utes of yangsheng fangzhong shu to chungong hua must
parody books sometimes discussed the quality of male come down to a consideration of the positions for coitus
and female organs, occasionally with detailed illustra- enjoyed by the couples. In shunga, realism in this matter is
tions. Sometimes, such books provided quite accurate not a necessary requirement. Yangsheng texts however do
anatomical descriptions of the organs, female ones being give detailed sexual positions for the remedy of ailments
specifically called Ōtsubie 大開絵 (Wide Open Pictures), and the enhancement of the couple’s well-being according
a not so subtle reference to the anatomical pose necessary to specific circumstances. These positions reappear in the
for inspection. Thus in shunga, we can identify a series of Ming illustrations.
rationales for the type of imagery from a ‘scientific inter-
est’ to the attraction to the ‘close-up view’, the influence
of Kabuki style dramatisation and a ribald popular sense Sexual Positioning in Chinese Erotic Art
of humour based on exaggeration.
In contrast to the shunga images with their essential In particular it is through a number of texts like Dongxuan
preoccupation with the moment of penetration, Chinese zi 洞玄子 (The Master Dongxuan) and the Qisun bayi 七損
chungong hua show large numbers of images of foreplay, 八益 (Seven Disadvantages and Eight Advantages) recorded
and rarely, if ever, show penetration in the sort of detail in the Ishimpō 38 that we have details of the use of specific
that would have been seen in the imported shunga (as in positions to cure or alleviate ailments. The Qisun bayi lists
Figure 2 above). This interest in foreplay can be seen, at least seven sexual positions to cure seven ailments or unhealthy
at some level, as carrying a cultural memory of yangsheng, conditions in the male, and eight further sexual positions
for the Han dynasty texts often expound on the need for to enhance male health.39 The positions of the Bayi – the
the man and woman to achieve emotional harmony before Eight Benefits – are set out in Table 1.40
penetration begins – and indeed on the health risks of Here the sexual satisfaction of the female is secondary to
failing to do so. As mentioned before, the man is specif- the health benefits available to each partner. The benefits
ically enjoined to carefully observe his partner’s level of for the female are listed separately without reference to
arousal and to act accordingly. Some scholars, from Japan the particular position but with emphasis on the number
in particular, have noted the lack of passion expressed of penetrations and their required frequency.
in the faces portrayed in Chinese chungong hua. This is In contrast, sexual positioning in erotic pictures did
also in keeping with the yangsheng concept, very much not have such a clear focus on health benef its. Rather,
discussed at the time, of the need to avoid extremes; and sexual positions are treated as examples of how best to
extreme emotions were seen as being especially damaging enjoy sexual relations. In spite of this, erotic pictures do
to the health.36 Unlike shunga, the figures in the Chinese still reflect the thinking of the sex manuals, in that the
images are often set in natural locations like gardens or positional variations shown would all have served the
spectacular scenery of ‘mountains and rivers’,37 where primary goal of female orgasm with different positions
the whole environment is an expression of the Yin and to be used according to the female’s state of arousal and
Yang of the cosmos – and the human actors are therefore personal preference. Modern Western sexology with its
merely playing their small part in it. In other cases, the ‘discovery’ of the G-spot makes this plausible to the modern
arrangement of details in the image, such as Taihushi 太 reader. But let us return to the Qisun bayi and the Seven
湖石 (Lake Tai Stones), expresses the same idea. Disadvantages.

36 Gao Lian 高濂 (c. 1527–1603), Zunsheng bajian 遵生八牋 (Eight


Discourses on Respecting Life, 1591). See Chen Hsiu-fen 2008, 38 See Ishimpō 28 (‘fangnei’), 1955 edn, pp.63–8; Umekawa 2004,
pp. 29–45. pp. 132–7.
37 Shan Shui 山水 (Mountains and Rivers) is itself one of the great 39 Ishimpō 28 (‘fangnei’), 1955 edn, pp. 642–3.
traditional forms of Chinese art. 40 Ibid. p. 642.

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the relationship between chinese erotic art and the art of the bedchamber 221

Table 15.1 Positions, Effects and Number of Insertions of the Eight Benefits

Name Medicinal Position No. of in­


objective ser­tions
Gujing 固精 To congeal male The female lies on her side and extends her thighs. The male 18
(coagulation of energy) energy places himself between her thighs, lying on his side.
Anqi 安氣 (easing Qi) To harmonise male The female lies on her back, places her head on a high pillow and 27
Qi extends her legs. The male kneels between her legs.
Lizang 利藏 To harmonise male The female lies on her side and bends her knees. The male lies on 36
(benefiting storage) Qi his side behind her.
Qianggu 強骨 To harmonise male The female lies on her side with her left knee bent and her right 45
(strengthening bones) joints leg extended. The male lies upon her.
Tiaomai 調脈 (regulat- To smooth male The female lies on her side with her right knee bent and her left 54
ing the vessels) vessels leg extended. The male supports himself on the ground.
Xuxue 蓄血 To make the male The male lies on his back. The female kneels on him, placing her 63
(depositing blood) more robust buttocks on him to insert the penis deeply.
Yiye 益液 (benefiting To strengthen the The female lies on her face and raises her back. The male rides on 72
secretion) male bones her.
Daoti 道體 (body of the To fill the male The female lies on her back and bends her legs so that her toes are 81
way) bones placed under her buttocks. The male holds her under the arms.

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222 sumiyo umekawa 梅川純代 and dear

Table 15.2 Therapeutic Sexual Intercourse for the Seven Disadvantages41

Condition Cause Symptoms Position for remedy Insertion


instruction
Jueqi 絶氣 Unwilling sex Sweat, decrease of Qi, heat in The female lies on her back Deeply
the heart and dizziness while the male supports her feet
Interdicted
on his shoulders.
Qi
Yijing 益精 Sex before the harmonious Harm to the lungs which The female lies on her back and Shallowly,
preparation of male and causes disorders of breathing bends her knees making room a half cun.
Excessive
female, emission of semen in and Qi, coughing, extreme for the man between them.
ejaculation
the middle of intercourse and emotional instability, thirst,
sex when drunk and fever
Duomai 奪脈 Forced sex without the penis Exhaustion of Qi, harm to The female lies on her back and
being sufficiently hard, coer- the spleen, dyspepsia and wraps her feet around the male’s
Forcing of
cive ejaculation in the middle impotence buttocks. The male supports
the channels
of intercourse and sex after himself with a seat during
overeating penetration.
Qixie 氣泄 Sex before the sweat is dry Heat in the abdomen and The male lies on his back while Shallowly
because of tiredness thirst on the lips the female rides on him facing
Leakage of
his feet. She supports herself
Qi
with a seat during penetration.
Jiguan 機關 Sex with those who have Harm to the liver, dim sight, The male lies on his back while Slowly
chronic internal ailments or swellings and impotence the female rides on him, face to
( jueshang 厥
too soon after defecation/ face.
傷) Fainting
urination
and harm
Baibi 百閉 Involuntary ejaculation due No semen at ejaculation The male lies on his back while Let the fe-
Hundred to excess of female sexual because Qi is exhausted the female lies upon him sup- male insert
blockages desire porting herself with a seat. the penis.
Xuejie 血竭 Sex when extremely fatigued Drying out of blood, exhaus- The female lies on her back, Deeply
with repeated ejaculation tion of Qi, deterioration of raises her buttocks high and ex-
Drying out of
the skin, pain in the penis, tends her feet straight. The male
blood
wetness of the testicles, kneels between her knees.
emission of blood instead of
semen from the penis

41 Ibid. pp. 642–3.

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the relationship between chinese erotic art and the art of the bedchamber 223

Figure 15.3 ‘Wang haichao’ 望海潮” (Watching the Rising Tide), from Diagram 15.1 ‘Beifei fu’ 背飛鳧 (Duck Flying on the Back), based on
Huaying qinzhen 花營錦陣 (Variegated Positions of the a description in Dongxuan zi 洞玄子, ‘Sanshifa’三十法
Flowery Battle). Printed from an early 17th-century(?) (Thirty Sexual Positions). Sketch by Umekawa
woodblock. Source: van Gulik [1951] 2004, vol. 2, p. 233

Let us take an example from one of van Gulik’s pic­­torial trouble’.45 The troubled Yin indicates female orgasm,
discoveries, Huaying qinzhen 花營錦陣 (Variegated when the best Yin Qi is produced. Thus we can see how
Positions of the Flowery Battle). Figure 3 is a picture from the performative dimension of these images takes shape,
this collection called Wanghai chao 望海潮 (Watching where, against the broad background of popular culture,
the Rising Tide). It is identical to the posture Beifei fu 背 yangsheng and medical knowledge provide the context in
飛鳧 (Duck Flying on the Back) (Diagram 1) described which they could be perceived to be effective.
in Dongxuan zi 洞玄子 (The Master Dongxuan), and is In other examples, a picture named Fenglou chun 鳳
designated as treatment for the leakage of Qi (see Table 2). 樓春 (Spring in the Phoenix Tower) in The Flowery Battle
It would appear to be cognate with the posture named corresponds to Hai’ouxiang 海鷗翔 (Flying Seagull) in
‘rabbit sucking fur’, from the Xuannü jing玄女經 (The Dongxuan zi, while Queqiao xian 鵲橋仙 (The Immortals
Canon of the Dark Girl), which also involves the woman of the Magpie Bridge) in The Flowery Battle matches the po-
kneeling astride the male, with her back to him. The sition called Baibi 百閉 (Hundred Blockages) in Dongxuan
description here instructs the man to attack her qinxian zi, which heals one of the seven ailments (see Table 2).
琴弦 (zither strings), which are located at a depth of ap- In another example of the correspondence between
proximately 1 cun 寸 from the entrance of the vagina.42 imagery and the texts, Figure 4 appears to depict a position
Again this appears to correspond to the G-spot. The same known as Yujie shi 魚唼勢 (Posture of Fishes Kissing) in a
location is described in Yufang mijue玉房秘訣 (Secrets sex book called Sunü miaolun 素女妙論 (Precise Theory
of the Jade Chamber)43 as a ‘spot in which Yin and Yang of the Plain Girl). In the Sunü miaolun, it is described as
are harmonised’44 and the place ‘in which Yin falls into follows;
Let one of two girls lie on her back, while the other lies on
top of her embracing each other as if in intercourse. Where
42 Ishimpō 28 (‘fangnei’), p. 640.
43 Also in Ishimpō.
44 Ishimpō 28 (‘fangnei’), p. 646. 45 Ibid.

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224 sumiyo umekawa 梅川純代 and dear

Figure 15.5 Houting yan 後庭宴 (Celebration in the Rear Courtyard),


from Huaying qinzhen 花營錦陣 (Variegated Positions of
the Flowery Battle). Printed from an early 17th-century(?)
woodblock. Source: van Gulik [1951] 2004, vol. 2, p. 265

Figure 15.4 Fishes Kissing. Anonymous. Source: Bertholet and Yimen of the chrysanthemum in the background of the image,
[1997] 1998, p. 144 which has been taken as an analogue of the anus.48 Like
the shunga discussed above, this image was probably de-
the gates of females press upon each other, they will open signed to induce a humorous as well as erotic reaction.49
naturally like the mouths of fishes.46 The Houting yan picture certainly falls into the category
of chungong hua, and arguably fangzhong shu, but defi-
Of course, superficial correspondence between images and nitely not yangsheng, which seems to focus exclusively on
earlier descriptions cannot be taken as a routine proof. vaginal penetration. However from our point of view, the
Figure 5 is another of the drawings from The Flowery Battle, most important thing it tells us is that the symbols and
titled Houting yan 後庭宴 (Celebration in the Backyard). details depicted in chungong hua were not arbitrary or
Superficially it might be seen to correspond to Xuannü random but were indeed composed in relation to a wide
jing’s ‘Tiger walking’ or the Dongxuan zi ‘White Tiger range of literary and cultural references. In his study of
Jumping’ (Diagram 2). medicine and literature ‘Fictional Medicine: Doctors,
White Tiger Jumping: The woman should kneel face Disease and the Curative properties of Chinese Fiction’,
downwards. The man should kneel behind her, embrace Andrew Schonebaum observes of the works of this period:
her waist with his hands, and insert his yujing 玉莖 (Jade The fact that medical manuals and pamphlets still
Stalk, i.e. the penis) into her zigong 子宮 (Child Palace).47 addressed the supposedly outdated notion of nurturing
However, Houting yan specifically depicts anal sex. The the essence, even if only to debunk it, shows that the
subtext of medical texts was essentially the same as that of
female’s raised leg is a small but probably technically
erotic literature, and that it was part of the same popular
signif icant difference in the detail of the image, while imagination.50
the name of the posture is extremely close to a sexual po-
sition named in Jinping mei as Liting hua 裏庭花 (Flower From what we have seen above, and many other corre-
in the Back Garden) (Fig. 6), in an explicit description of spondences, we would suggest that the creators of erotic
male-female anal sex between two of the novel’s key pro-
tagonists. This is further re-enforced by the symbolism 48 See Screech 1999, pp. 151–3.
49 The story of Aunt Flora in Roupu tuan makes clear that this was
46 Sunü miaolun, 1556 text, in van Gulik 1951, vol. ii, p. 153. indeed a subject of mirth. See Hanan 1996, pp. 264–74.
47 Ishimpō. 28 (‘fangnei’), p. 641. 50 Schonebaum 2004, p. 271.

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the relationship between chinese erotic art and the art of the bedchamber 225

Diagram 15.2 ‘Baihu teng’白虎騰 (White Tiger Jumping), based on a Figure 15.6 ‘Liting hua’ 裏庭花 (Flower in the Back Garden), scene
description in Dongxuan zi 洞玄子, ‘Sanshifa’ 三十法 from Jinping mei, ch. 52. Source: Bertholet and Yimen
­(Thirty Sexual Positions). Sketch by Umekawa. [1997] 1998, p. 108

illustrations had frequent recourse to the fangzhong shu perceptions of the body and its relationship to the cosmos
manuals, as well as to popular stories, for their inspiration. were conceived. However, the images were competing in a
Conversely existing practitioners of the sexual arts would market place with materials whose purpose was simply to
have viewed such pictures as visual confirmation of their stimulate and entertain and thus were subject to a process
knowledge. of commodification ably described elsewhere by both Craig
Clunas and Timothy Brook.52
Further research needs to be undertaken on the connec-
Conclusion tions between chungong hua and Ming/Qing society and
the popular literature of the time and in particular more
In conclusion, we can say that we do believe, prima facie, work is needed on the evolution of fangzhong shu texts
that the Chinese chungong hua illustrations represent an themselves which seem to undergo a dramatic transfor-
extension of fangzhong shu by other means. They were mation during and after the Song dynasty.
an adaptation to the changed social, technological and
commercial situation of their times. Through their focus
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