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To be seen and not heard: femininity ideology and adolescent girls' sexual health. | LitMetric

To be seen and not heard: femininity ideology and adolescent girls' sexual health.

Arch Sex Behav

Center for Research on Gender and Sexuality, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, California 94110, USA.

Published: April 2006

This study used a feminist developmental framework to test the hypothesis that internalizing conventional ideas about femininity in two domains--inauthenticity in relationships and body objectification--is associated with diminished sexual health among adolescent girls. In this study, sexual health was conceptualized as feelings of sexual self-efficacy (i.e., a girl's conviction that she can act upon her own sexual needs in a relationship) and protection behavior (i.e., from both STIs and unwanted pregnancy). A total of 116 girls (aged 16-19) completed measures of femininity ideology, sexual self-efficacy, sexual experiences, and protection behavior. Results revealed that inauthenticity in relationships and body objectification were associated with poorer sexual self-efficacy and sexual self-efficacy, in turn, predicted less sexual experience and less use of protection. Further, the two components of femininity ideology were associated with different forms of protection. The importance of a feminist developmental framework for identifying and understanding salient dimensions of sexual health for female adolescents is discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10508-005-9016-0DOI Listing

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