模糊了界限:“年轻人中的醉酒、性别、同意和性接触。”

IF 2.3 Q3 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Geoffrey Hunt, Emile Sanders, Margit Anne Petersen, Alexandra Bogren
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引用次数: 12

摘要

近年来,社会对年轻人的性行为和性同意的关注显著增加,而醉酒往往在这类辩论中发挥了关键作用。虽然许多研究长期以来都表明酒精在促进(随意)性接触中起着重要作用,但醉酒在很大程度上要么被概念化为一种风险因素,要么研究人员将重点放在酒精对性互动和同意相关行为的药理作用上。迄今为止,很少有研究探讨年轻人在性接触中如何定义和协商可接受和不可接受的醉酒程度,也没有研究不同程度的醉酒如何影响性别化的性剧本和同意的含义。本文利用对旧金山湾区18-25岁的顺性别、异性恋年轻人进行的145次深度定性访谈数据,探讨了后两个研究问题。在检查这些访谈数据时,通过探索醉酒和性同意之间的关系,以及性别在可接受和不可接受的醉酒性接触概念中发挥作用的方式,我们强调了不同程度的醉酒如何发出不同的性脚本。关于低水平醉酒时的性接触的叙述强调了醉酒在实现性社交方面的作用,但它们也依赖于醉酒同意依赖于饮酒环境之外的伴侣之间的社会关系这一概念。关于在酗酒情况下的性接触的叙述更明确地性别化,通常与传统的性别剧本保持一致。总的来说,我们发现当男性讨论自己的醉酒程度时,他们的叙述更多地集中在性表现和地位低下的性伴侣上,而女性和一些男性关于女性醉酒程度的叙述则集中在女性的同意、安全和体面上。最后,一些参与者依靠“同意即契约”和“醉酒平等”——即潜在的性伴侣应该同样醉酒——来处理人际性剧本中的权力关系。由于这些概念有时是战略性的,我们认为它们可能会在有关各方之间的权力中起到“黑箱”的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"BLURRING THE LINE:" INTOXICATION, GENDER, CONSENT AND SEXUAL ENCOUNTERS AMONG YOUNG ADULTS.

Social concern about sexual practices and sexual consent among young adults has increased significantly in recent years, and intoxication has often played a key role in such debates. While many studies have long suggested that alcohol plays a role in facilitating (casual) sexual encounters, intoxication has largely either been conceptualized as a risk factor, or researchers have focused on the pharmacological effects of alcohol on behaviors associated with sexual interaction and consent. To date little work has explored how young adults define and negotiate acceptable and unacceptable levels of intoxication during sexual encounters, nor the ways in which different levels of intoxication influence gendered sexual scripts and meanings of consent. This paper explores the latter two research questions using data from 145 in-depth, qualitative interviews with cisgender, heterosexual young adults ages 18-25 in the San Francisco Bay Area. In examining these interview data, by exploring the relationship between intoxication and sexual consent, and the ways in which gender plays out in notions of acceptable and unacceptable intoxicated sexual encounters, we highlight how different levels of intoxication signal different sexual scripts. Narratives about sexual encounters at low levels of intoxication highlighted the role of intoxication in achieving sexual sociability, but they also relied on the notion that intoxicated consent was dependent on the social relationship between the partners outside drinking contexts. Narratives about sexual encounters in heavy drinking situations were more explicitly gendered, often in keeping with traditionally gendered sexual scripts. In general we found that when men discussed their own levels of intoxication, their narratives were more focused on sexual performance and low status sex partners, while women's and some men's narratives about women's levels of intoxication were focused on women's consent, safety, and respectability. Finally, some participants rely on 'consent as a contract' and 'intoxication parity'- the idea that potential sexual partners should be equally intoxicated - to handle relations of power in interpersonal sexual scripts. Since these notions are sometimes deployed strategically, we suggest that they may serve to "black-box" gendered inequalities in power between the parties involved.

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来源期刊
Contemporary Drug Problems
Contemporary Drug Problems Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Contemporary Drug Problems is a scholarly journal that publishes peer-reviewed social science research on alcohol and other psychoactive drugs, licit and illicit. The journal’s orientation is multidisciplinary and international; it is open to any research paper that contributes to social, cultural, historical or epidemiological knowledge and theory concerning drug use and related problems. While Contemporary Drug Problems publishes all types of social science research on alcohol and other drugs, it recognizes that innovative or challenging research can sometimes struggle to find a suitable outlet. The journal therefore particularly welcomes original studies for which publication options are limited, including historical research, qualitative studies, and policy and legal analyses. In terms of readership, Contemporary Drug Problems serves a burgeoning constituency of social researchers as well as policy makers and practitioners working in health, welfare, social services, public policy, criminal justice and law enforcement.
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