Print This Post Print This Post

teens, sex, and sociology

From the world of cultural studies, good news about hiphop:

Dr. Muñoz-Laboy spent three years studying the hip-hop club scene, talking to dozens of teenagers and watching them dance. While hip-hop music has been widely assailed as misogynistic, the researchers found that young women were the “gatekeepers” of boundaries on the dance floor, according to research published this month in the journal Culture, Health and Sexuality. Even during the highly sexualized form of dance known as grinding, in which bodies rub against each other, the girls in the study “were consistently vigilant about maintaining control over their bodies and space,” the study noted.

Most of the teenagers in the study were sexually experienced. But the researchers found that the overt sexuality of the music and dancing was not the main influence on sexual behavior. Rather it was the old standbys of alcohol, drugs and peer pressure that typically led them into sexual encounters.

From the world of public education, bad news about abstinence-only  programs:

Programs that focus exclusively on abstinence have not been shown to affect teenager sexual behavior, although they are eligible for tens of millions of dollars in federal grants, according to a study released by a nonpartisan group that seeks to reduce teen pregnancies.

“At present there does not exist any strong evidence that any abstinence program delays the initiation of sex, hastens the return to abstinence or reduces the number of sexual partners” among teenagers, the study concluded.

In the West, it is only in still-Puritan America that we are obsessed with trying to control our kids’ sexual behavior—which is essentially uncontrollable. That behavior is always about the social norms in their peer group, and kids trying to balance their personal values and urges with trying to fit in … somewhere.

0 comments ↓

There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.

Leave a Comment