Literature DB >> 36092964

"BLURRING THE LINE:" INTOXICATION, GENDER, CONSENT AND SEXUAL ENCOUNTERS AMONG YOUNG ADULTS.

Geoffrey Hunt1,2, Emile Sanders2, Margit Anne Petersen1, Alexandra Bogren3.   

Abstract

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.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 36092964      PMCID: PMC9455916          DOI: 10.1177/00914509211058900

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Contemp Drug Probl        ISSN: 0091-4509


  35 in total

Review 1.  Why do young people drink? A review of drinking motives.

Authors:  Emmanuel Kuntsche; Ronald Knibbe; Gerhard Gmel; Rutger Engels
Journal:  Clin Psychol Rev       Date:  2005-11

2.  Changing drinking styles in Denmark and Finland. Fragmentation of male and female drinking among young adults.

Authors:  Jakob Demant; Jukka Törrönen
Journal:  Subst Use Misuse       Date:  2011-05-27       Impact factor: 2.164

3.  Relationship between alcohol consumption and victim behaviors immediately preceding sexual aggression by an acquaintance.

Authors:  N T Harrington; H Leitenberg
Journal:  Violence Vict       Date:  1994

4.  "Man-ing" up and getting drunk: the role of masculine norms, alcohol intoxication and alcohol-related problems among college men.

Authors:  Derek Kenji Iwamoto; Alice Cheng; Christina S Lee; Stephanie Takamatsu; Derrick Gordon
Journal:  Addict Behav       Date:  2011-05-01       Impact factor: 3.913

Review 5.  Evaluating the One-in-Five Statistic: Women's Risk of Sexual Assault While in College.

Authors:  Charlene L Muehlenhard; Zoë D Peterson; Terry P Humphreys; Kristen N Jozkowski
Journal:  J Sex Res       Date:  2017-04-04

6.  Sexual scripts among young heterosexually active men and women: continuity and change.

Authors:  N Tatiana Masters; Erin Casey; Elizabeth A Wells; Diane M Morrison
Journal:  J Sex Res       Date:  2012-04-10

7.  College students and sexual consent: unique insights.

Authors:  Kristen N Jozkowski; Zoë D Peterson
Journal:  J Sex Res       Date:  2012-10-05

8.  Correlates of rape while intoxicated in a national sample of college women.

Authors:  Meichun Mohler-Kuo; George W Dowdall; Mary P Koss; Henry Wechsler
Journal:  J Stud Alcohol       Date:  2004-01

9.  Sexual consent behaviors in same-sex relationships.

Authors:  Melanie A Beres; Edward Herold; Scott B Maitland
Journal:  Arch Sex Behav       Date:  2004-10

10.  Youth risk behavior surveillance--United States, 2013.

Authors:  Laura Kann; Steve Kinchen; Shari L Shanklin; Katherine H Flint; Joseph Kawkins; William A Harris; Richard Lowry; Emily O'Malley Olsen; Tim McManus; David Chyen; Lisa Whittle; Eboni Taylor; Zewditu Demissie; Nancy Brener; Jemekia Thornton; John Moore; Stephanie Zaza
Journal:  MMWR Suppl       Date:  2014-06-13
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