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Everyday Erotics

Older Chinese Women and Same-Sex Desire

Denise Tse-Shang Tang

$240

Hardback

Forthcoming
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English
Duke University Press
31 March 2026
In Everyday Erotics, Denise Tse-Shang Tang explores the lives of older women with same-sex desire in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taiwan. Tang interviews women born in the 1930’s through the 1960’s, looking at how their lives differ across culture, class, and place, and how they lived and understood their own desires and social worlds. Through these tales of love, intimacy, family obligations, and personal respectability, she presents narrative accounts and analyses that complicate cultural notions of romance and desire at the intersections of gender roles, social class, and history. An ethnography grounded in inter-Asian cultural flows and connected histories, Everyday Erotics builds an archive of queer women’s lives and a genealogy of their experiences.
By:  
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   572g
ISBN:   9781478033684
ISBN 10:   1478033681
Pages:   200
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming

Denise Tse-Shang Tang is Associate Professor and Department Head of Cultural Studies at Lingnan University and is author of Conditional Spaces: Hong Kong Lesbian Desires and Everyday Life.

Reviews for Everyday Erotics: Older Chinese Women and Same-Sex Desire

""Everyday Erotics vividly presents abundant, fascinating data from a generation of older women, many of whom rarely speak publicly about their intimate lives. Tang provides a new, much-needed oral history of an Inter-Asian formation of queer female sexuality and community from the 1960s to the present.""--Amie Elizabeth Parry, English Department and the Center for the Study of Sexualities, National Central University, Taiwan ""This singular study of older Chinese lesbians presents a series of unexpected life histories of self-making. Tang's engrossing ethnography offers a comparative analysis that neither replicates Euro-American accounts of sexual identity politics nor mimics the evolution of its authorized women's movements. Instead, we encounter a world of same-sex desires, longings, and practices that reveal the day-to-day building of relationships and communities against the odds.""--David L. Eng, author of, The Feeling of Kinship: Queer Liberalism and the Racialization of Intimacy


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