Temps de lecture : 15 minutes
References
↑1, ↑2, ↑3, ↑5, ↑9 | Monteil, L. (2014, novembre 27). Usages et articulations de la perspective des scripts dans l’étude de la construction de l’homosexualité en Chine post-maoïste. Quarante ans après que reste-t-il des scripts sexuels ? Usages et perspectives de la théorie des scripts sexuels. https://shs.hal.science/halshs-01551792 |
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↑4 | Here “LGBT” will be used to refer to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community. Intersex, asexual and other sexual minorities have not been studied in some cases. And “LGBTQIA+” will refer to the global movement fighting for the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, asexual and every other sexual, romantic and gender minority. |
↑6 | “The crime of hooliganism (liumangzui), which was not specifically defined during the Maoist period due to the absence of a penal code, referred to all forms of behavior deemed to represent vestiges of the old society. In the People’s Republic of China’s first penal code, drawn up in 1979, this crime covered activities such as “gang fights, provoking fights and disturbances, sexual assaults on women, or other hooligan activities or disturbances of public order” (Kang 2012: 233). It was through the administration’s and police’s free assimilation of sodomy (jijian) to the criminal category of hooliganism that men were punished on the basis of their involvement in homosexual relations or meeting places. However, homosexuality has never been properly criminalised in the People’s Republic of China, as the issue does not appear in central government documents and is not directly the subject of official discussion”. Monteil, L. (2014, novembre 27). Usages et articulations de la perspective des scripts dans l’étude de la construction de l’homosexualité en Chine post-maoïste. Quarante ans après que reste-t-il des scripts sexuels ? Usages et perspectives de la théorie des scripts sexuels. https://shs.hal.science/halshs-01551792 |
↑7, ↑8 | “The crime of hooliganism (liumangzui), which was not specifically defined during the Maoist period due to the absence of a penal code, referred to all forms of behavior deemed to represent vestiges of the old society. In the People’s Republic of China’s first penal code, drawn up in 1979, this crime covered activities such as “gang fights, provoking fights and disturbances, sexual assaults on women, or other hooligan activities or disturbances of public order” (Kang 2012: 233). It was through the administration’s and police’s free assimilation of sodomy (jijian) to the criminal category of hooliganism that men were punished on the basis of their involvement in homosexual relations or meeting places. However, homosexuality has never been properly criminalised in the People’s Republic of China, as the issue does not appear in central government documents and is not directly the subject of official discussion”. Monteil, L. (2014, novembre 27). Usages et articulations de la perspective des scripts dans l’étude de la construction de l’homosexualité en Chine post-maoïste. Quarante ans après que reste-t-il des scripts sexuels ? Usages et perspectives de la théorie des scripts sexuels. https://shs.hal.science/halshs-01551792 |
↑10, ↑25, ↑26, ↑27, ↑29 | Monteil, T. H. & L. (2017). LGBT, chinois.e.s et connecté.e.s. La Vie des idées. https://laviedesidees.fr/LGBT-chinois-e-s-et-connecte-e-s.html |
↑11 | For more detail, see the 2017 law on cybersecurity and the 2015 law on national security. |
↑12 | China’s iQiyi fined for showing ‘LGBT’ content in sign of tightening controls. (2018, 13 avril). Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-lgbt-iqiyi/chinas-iqiyi-fined-for-showing-lgbt-content-in-sign-of-tightening-controls-idUSKBN1HL0O9 |
↑13 | Gaudiaut, T. (2018, août 31). Infographie : 98 % des utilisateurs Internet chinois surfent via mobile. Statista Infographies. https://fr.statista.com/infographie/15294/utilisateurs-internet-mobile-en-chine |
↑14 | Arsène, S. (2019). La Chine et le contrôle d’Internet. Une cybersouveraineté ambivalente. |
↑15 | Monteil, T. H. & L. (2017). LGBT, chinois.e.s et connecté.e.s. La Vie des idées. |
↑16 | Cui, Z. (Réalisateur). (2008). Queer China, « Comrade » China. [Chine Queer, “Camarade” Chine. https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Queer_China,_%27Comrade%27_China&oldid=1101199391 |
↑17 | Hong, T. (2022). De zhiqing à « mères d’enfants tongzhi » : Liens entre passé socialiste, présent réflexif et futur des personnes LGBTI+ en Chine (P.-L. Brunet, Trad.). Perspectives chinoises, 2022(1), Article 1. https://journals.openedition.org/perspectiveschinoises/12730 |
↑18, ↑19 | “Tongshi » (同志) ”Litteraly “comrade” tongzhi is a politically connotate term used by the Chinese world’s homosexual communities since the end of the 1980 to express their queer identities (Wong 2011 ; Li 2012).” Hong, T. (2022). De zhiqing à « mères d’enfants tongzhi » : Liens entre passé socialiste, présent réflexif et futur des personnes LGBTI+ en Chine (P.-L. Brunet, Trad.). Perspectives chinoises, 2022(1), Article 1. https://journals.openedition.org/perspectiveschinoises/12730 |
↑20 | Zheng, T. (2017). Elisabeth L. Engebretsen et William F. Schroeder, avec Hongwei Bao (éds.), Queer/Tongzhi China : New Perspectives on Research, Activism and Media Cultures,[ Queer/Tongzhi China : Nouvelles perspectives de recherche, d’activisme et de culture médiatique]. Perspectives chinoises, 2017(2), Article 2. https://journals.openedition.org/perspectiveschinoises/7805 |
↑21 | Hong, T. (2022). De zhiqing à « mères d’enfants tongzhi » : Liens entre passé socialiste, présent réflexif et futur des LGBT en Chine (P.-L. Brunet, Trad.). Perspectives chinoises, 2022(1), Article 1. https://journals.openedition.org/perspectiveschinoises/12730 |
↑22 | At the beginning, the term “queer”, meaning “weird” was an insult against the LGBT community. However, the activists began to reclaim the term, reversing the stigma and giving the term a highly political dimension as it claims the existence of subversive gender and sexualities. Laure Bereni et al., Introduction aux études sur le genre, 2e édition, Ouvertures politiques (DeBoeck, 2012), 49. |
↑23, ↑24 | Docteurs, L. rédaction d’Allo. (2014, juillet 31). Chine : Première plainte contre une clinique « “traitant” » l’homosexualité. AlloDocteurs. https://www.allodocteurs.fr/sexo-homosexualite-chine-premiere-plainte-contre-une-clinique-traitant-lhomosexualite-14068.html |
↑28 | Goldbach, J. T., Rhoades, H., Green, D., Fulginiti, A., & Marshal, M. P. (2019). Is There a Need for LGBT-Specific Suicide Crisis Services? [Existe-t-il un besoin de services d’aide au suicide spécifiques aux LGBT ?] Crisis, 40(3), 203208. https://doi.org/10.1027/0227-5910/a000542 |
↑30 | Huang, S., & Wong, T. S.-T. (2019). ’More coming out, bigger market’ : Queer visibility and queer subjectivity in the Chinese pink market. [“Plus coming out, plus gros marché” : visibilité et subjectivité queer sur le marché rose chinois.] Queer Studies in Media & Popular Culture, 4(3), 287302. https://doi.org/10.1386/qsmpc_00013_1 |
↑31 | Zeineb Touati, « Surexposition numérique et stratégies de médiatisation des LGBT en Tunisie », ILCEA [En ligne], 46 | 2022, mis en ligne le 02 mars 2022, consulté le 15 juin 2023. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/ilcea/14020 ; DOI : https://doi.org/10.4000/ilcea.14020 |