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Gender, heterosexuality, sexual violence and identity among heavy-drinking white and Asian American college students.

机译:酗酒的白人和亚裔美国大学生中的性别,异性恋,性暴力和身份认同。

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摘要

In this dissertation I use qualitative methods to explore the social practices, intersections and co-constructions of gender, sexuality, race, and identity in the context of campus partying. Drawing on data from 90 interviews with white and Asian American college students who identify as heavy drinkers, as well as over 30 hours of ethnographic observations of campus bars, I investigate students' experiences with partying, and develop suggestions for preventing some of the most detrimental outcomes of partying -- substance abuse and sexual violence. The results of these analyses are presented here in four distinct empirical articles.;In the first article I demonstrate the importance of partying to individuals' lives, sense of belonging, and self-identity. I suggest that reconceptualizing partying as an identity, and a social practice through which identity is constructed, could improve substance abuse intervention. In the second article I find that hooking-up while drinking is much less common, less expected, and less accepted in Asian American party cultures than in white ones; this provides support for de-linking the naturalized connection between alcohol and sexual behavior. Further, I find both racialized gender differences and gendered racial differences in the relationship between alcohol and sexual behavior, suggesting value of an intersectional analysis.;In the next article I explore the processes of heterosexual interaction while drinking, including how sexual interest and consent are communicated. Students report many "gray areas" around communicating sexual interest and consent, and describe the simultaneity of both sexual agency and exploitation in the context of drinking. The final empirical article draws on a subsample of 31 women and uses insights from Foucault's theories of power to explore women's strategies for negotiating the risks of sexual violence while partying. I show that women reproduce traditional gender norms and stereotypes in their interactions with each other, and suggest that deconstructing these patterns of interaction offers new possibilities for sexual violence prevention. This dissertation concludes with a discussion of general themes that run through all four empirical articles, offering recommendations for future research and for applying insights from these analyses to the prevention and intervention of substance abuse and sexual violence.
机译:在本文中,我使用定性方法探讨了校园聚会中的社会实践,性别,性,种族和身份的交融和共建。根据90名接受白人和亚裔美国人大学生喝酒的访谈的数据,以及超过30个小时的校园酒吧的民族志观察,我调查了学生的开派对经验,并提出了一些预防措施,以防止某些危害最大的人开派对的结果-滥用毒品和性暴力。这些分析的结果在四篇不同的实证文章中进行了介绍。在第一篇文章中,我展示了参加聚会对个人生活,归属感和自我认同的重要性。我建议将聚会作为一种身份进行重新概念化,并通过一种社会实践来构建身份,可以改善对药物滥用的干预。在第二篇文章中,我发现与亚裔美国人相比,喝酒时的联欢在亚裔美国人政党文化中要普遍得多,更少期望和接受。这为消除酒精与性行为之间的自然联系提供了支持。此外,在酒精与性行为之间的关系中,我发现了种族性别差异和性别种族差异,这表明了交叉分析的价值。在下一篇文章中,我探讨了喝酒时异性互动的过程,包括性兴趣和同意的方式沟通。学生报告了围绕交流性兴趣和同意的许多“灰色地带”,并描述了饮酒情况下性代理和性剥削的同时性。最终的经验文章以31名妇女的子样本为依据,并运用了福柯权力理论的真知灼见,探索了妇女在聚会时应对性暴力风险进行谈判的策略。我表明,妇女在彼此的交往中重现了传统的性别规范和陈规定型观念,并建议解构这些交往方式可为预防性暴力提供新的可能性。本文的结尾是对贯穿所有四篇实证文章的一般主题的讨论,为将来的研究提供了建议,并将这些分析中的见识应用于预防和干预药物滥用和性暴力。

著录项

  • 作者

    Luke, Katherine Pavelka.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Michigan.;

  • 授予单位 University of Michigan.;
  • 学科 Education Sociology of.;Social Work.;Womens Studies.;Sociology Criminology and Penology.;Asian American Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2009
  • 页码 221 p.
  • 总页数 221
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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