The Gamesmanship of Sex: A Model Based on African American Adolescent Accounts |
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Authors: | Stephen L. Eyre Valerie Hoffman Susan G. Millstein |
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Affiliation: | Division of Adolescent Medicine;Medical Anthropology Program, University of California, San Francisco;Drug Abuse Research Center, University of California, Los Angeles;Division of Adolescent Medicine, University of California, San Francisco |
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Abstract: | This article examines adolescent understanding of the social context of sexual behavior. Using grounded theory to interpret interviews with 39 African American male and female adolescents, the article builds a model of sex-related behavior as a set of interrelated games. A courtship game involves communication of sexual or romantic interest and, over time, formation of a romantic relationship. A duplicity game draws on conventions of a courtship game to trick a partner into having sex. A disclosure game spreads stories about one's own and others' sex-related activities to peers in a gossip network. Finally, a prestige game builds social reputation in the eyes of peers, typically based on gender-specific standards. The article concludes by examining the meanings that sex-related behavior may have for adolescents and the potential use of social know ledge for facilitating adolescent health, [adolescence, sexuality, African American, game theory, health promotion] |
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