Hanna Rosin, senior editor at The Atlantic and author of The End of Men, has written a piece about hook up culture on and off college campuses for the September issue of her magazine. Given that I’ve done some research on hook up culture, W.W. Norton’s Karl Bakeman asked me to weigh in. So, here are my two cents: Rosin isn’t wrong to argue that the culture offers women sexual opportunities and independence, but she mischaracterizes the objections to hook up culture and draws too rosy a conclusion.
Those who wring their hands and “lament” hook up culture, Rosin contends, do so because they think women are giving it up too easily, a practice that will inevitably leave them heartbroken.`She writes:
[Critics of hook up culture pine] for an earlier time, when fathers protected “innocent” girls from “punks” and predators, and when girls understood it was their role to also protect themselves.
If this is the problem, the answer is less sex and more (sexless?) relationships. But, Rosin rightly argues, this wrongly stereotypes women as fragile flowers whose self-esteem lies between their legs. It also romanticizes relationships. Drawing on the fantastic research of sociologists Laura Hamilton and Elizabeth Armstrong, she explains that young women often find serious relationships with men to be distracting; staying single (and hooking up for fun) is one way to protect their own educational and career paths.
All this is true and so, Rosin concludes, hook up culture is “an engine of female progress — one being harnessed and driven by women themselves.”
Well, not exactly. Yes, women get to choose to have sex with men casually and many do. And some women truly enjoy hook up culture, while others who like it less still learn a lot about themselves and feel grateful for the experiences. I make this argument with my colleague, Caroline Heldman, in Hooking Up and Opting Out: Negotiating Sex in the First Year of College.
But what young women don’t control is the context in which they have sex. The problem with hook up culture is not casual sex, nor is it the fact that some women are choosing it, it’s the sexism that encourages men to treat women like pawns and requires women to be just as cunning and manipulative if they want to be in the game; it’s the relentless pressure to be hot that makes some women feel like shit all the time and the rest feel like shit some of the time; it’s the heterosexism that marginalizes and excludes true experimentation with same-sex desire; and it’s the intolerance towards people who would rather be in relationships or practice abstinence (considered boring, pathetic, or weird by many advocates of hook up culture including, perhaps, Rosin).
Fundamentally, what’s wrong with hook up culture is the antagonistic, competitive, malevolent attitude towards one’s sexual partners. College students largely aren’t experimenting with sexuality nicely. Hook ups aren’t, on the whole, mutually satisfying, strongly consensual, experimental affairs during which both partners express concern for the others’ pleasure. They’re repetitive, awkward, and confusing sexual encounters in which men have orgasms more than twice as often as women:
The problem with hook up culture, then, is not that people are friends with benefits. It’s that they’re not. As one of my students concluded about one of her hook up partners: “You could have labeled it friends with benefits… without the friendship maybe?”
Hook up culture is an “engine of female progress” only if we take-for-granted that our destination is a caricature of male sexuality, one in which sex is a game with a winner and a loser. But do we really want sex to be competitive? Is “keep[ing] pace with the boys,” as Rosin puts it, really what liberation looks like? I think we can do better.
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 49
Karen Swanay — August 27, 2012
Worth considering that "women giving it away" means that the relative "value" of sex is lower (supply and demand)...and THIS drives the tendency women have to denigrate other women as whores etc. And also for men to value a woman who is "chaste" as a rare commodity. And then drives the Madonna/Whore dynamic too. How about we all stop trying to monitor what other people do as long as they aren't hurting anyone and everyone involved is able to consent legitimately.
Oligopsony — August 27, 2012
I feel like it can often be unclear what "hookup culture" is. Hookup culture's conservative detractors, I'm sure, would include friends with benefits as a part of it, and so would, I assume, Rosin.
I feel like Rosin is treating hookup culture as a universal - a situation where committed relationships are being held off until a relatively later date - and you're treating it as a particular - the set of sexual norms that prevail on college campuses today. One is held up to a mirror against older norms and another against possible norms.
So you and Rosin might not disagree so much as a "is hookup culture good/is it bad?" framing would imply. (This doesn't mean that you haven't of course raised very good points.)
WG — August 27, 2012
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Carpenter — August 27, 2012
The objections you raise to hookup culture are valid, but I don't think they have anything at all to do with hooking up. There is pressure for girls to be hot and to conform to beauty standards regardless of them hooking up. Women are pressured to validate men's needs whether they are having sex or not. Intolerance towards people that would rather be in relationships does not strike me as an actual fact on the ground, it just sounds like sensationalism. In fact I don't think "hookup culture" is even a real thing. Being for or against casual sex will not fix a damn thing about the sexist background-field in which we live.
Peck — August 27, 2012
Since I have not experienced this hookup culture myself, I have a hard time imagining it. I would like to hear several detailed accounts of "the intolerance towards people who would rather be in relationships or practice abstinence", in order to help me understand it better. How does this intolerance play out?
B. — August 27, 2012
Excellent critique of Rosin's arguments. (Sometimes I think she writes simply to generate controversy, but I digress...)
However, I agree with the comment below that I'd like to see a definition and data on "hookup culture." How many people are actually participating in hookups? For how long? Are we talking about one night stands or about people who have a "---- buddy?" Because the concept of casual sex is not exactly a 2010s phenomenon. While it was more harshly shunned, there is plenty of evidence that casual sex was a cultural phenomenon in the dance halls of the early 1900s. And women certainly weren't liberated then.
ExpatsRule — August 28, 2012
“To put it crudely, feminist progress right now largely depends on the existence of the hookup culture”
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–Hanna Rosin.
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THEN.“To put it crudely, feminist progress right now largely depends on men”
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-- the crude harsh truth
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Ya know, there is something almost surreally absurdly ironic about a feminist woman (Rosin) saying that feminist progress depends on penis providers who most likely view most of their female “hook-up ” participants purely as sexual gratification objects.
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http://www.hookingupsmart.com/2012/08/23/hookinguprealities/hannah-rosin-understands-feminism-but-not-hookup-culture/
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Are “Friends With Benefits” Really Friends? : Ms. Magazine Blog — August 28, 2012
[...] Crossposted from Sociological Images. [...]
Phire Walk With Me | Opting out of hook-up culture — August 28, 2012
[...] [...]
PM — August 28, 2012
Whenever I read something about hook-up culture everything is so vague. What is the definiton everyone is usin to critique? Where is any actual account of a woman who participates in casual sex because they want to? Everything I see always starts with "I'm not saying hook up culture is bad BUT" and proceeds to tear it apart without any concrete data to go with it.
Instead it's the same old stuff about how even if a woman thinks she is in control of her sexuality and wants to partake in it, their experience ends up being invalidated because they can't control the "context" of their sexual escapades. What the fuck? By tha line of reasoning you could argue that any woman's sexual experiences, casual or not, are inherently sexist and unequal because "context".
UnixDesigner78 — August 31, 2012
A modest point about the orgasm bar graph: Consider the ages of the kids involved in hookup culture. Then consider what the bar chart would look like if people started college at 30, or 40. My guess is it would be flipped around. It takes me an hour to orgasm, and my wife gets off much faster. Her friends report the same. Nature's cruel joke for men is that we are quick to orgasm well before our female counterparts, and in middle age, things flip around. There's a reason why 18 year-old women seek men in their late 20s, and 40-something women seek men in their early 20s for flings.
I also question the author's point about hookup culture enforcing heterosexuality. Liberal and conservative critics alike seem to paint a vision of this culture as involving the football players and the cheerleaders, as if college is just like high school. Well, there is more to life than joining a frat, and even in our small college town, plenty of opportunities to hookup and experiment within the LGBT community. College is incredibly welcoming to LGBT kids (and experimenting thereof). It's leaving college that's the problem. We have about one gay bashing a week here, and it's always middle-aged conservatives doing the bashing, with the college kids protesting it.
Might this be another piece policing young women's sexuality? Or just another Baby Boomer wringing her hands over "kids these days?" Some of these parents need to lay off. Their sons and daughters left the nest for a reason: to grow up and come into their own, as people do at 18. The worst manifestation of this worrywart culture is when parents call the office to settle their adult children's workplace issues. I wish this were just a media invention, but au contraire, I've seen it. Rarely, thank heavens. Parents, we WANT to hire your kids. They're bright, they're energetic, and they're full of ideas. Please don't feed the media stereotypes about them. The kids ARE alright.
Batomask — September 4, 2012
For those who express longing to see data, definitions, and facts on hookup culture, I recommend reading the article that the above orgasm data came from, by England, Schafer and Fogarty; the book "Hooking Up," by Kathleen Bogle; and other academic articles on the topic. There IS quite a bit known about hookup culture, and Lisa Wade (the academic author of this response to Rosin) is familiar with all of it. Do a "Google Scholar" search for hookup research and data, and you will have many of the answers you seek. Yes, there IS a "hookup culture;" it is what differentiates today's casual campus sexual activities from the exact same basic behaviors people engaged in decades ago (get tipsy at a party, make out with the guy/girl you've been crushing on for weeks/months). It is not just individual sexual behaviors; it is a CULTURE where students are EXPECTED to engage in these-and other- behaviors, where everyone talks about it, and where they believe that EVERYONE is having uncommitted sex with strangers, so if they themselves are not (and hardly anyone is), they feel outside the culture. Many students either do not actually "hook up" (and "hooking up" purposely has a very broad, vague, inclusive definition), or only do it a handful of times before they graduate college. Many "hookups" are with the same-not a new-partner, too. Those are the FACTS, generated by well-done, massive (20,000 students) surveys on college and university campuses around the country.
Country Music Fan — September 4, 2012
I think you may be painting "hook up culture", and to some extent, the desires of women, with too broad a brush. For me personally, I look at hook ups as a type of first date, where you might be able to watch a movie, dance, listen to music, and get to know one another. An added bonus of this sort of relationship style within the hookup culture is that you can find out sooner, rather than later, if you are sexually compatible with someone.
I have no doubt, and I have seen, what you are critiquing. But, the problem seems to lie in the broader American culture (sexism, etc.), rather than within hookup culture itself.
Barry Fresh — September 5, 2012
That graph would be a lot more powerful if there was another graph to compare it with, say rate of orgasm in a monogamous relationship
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