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Im 15 and Desperate for Sex: Doing and Undoing Desire in Letters to a Teenage MagazineSchool of Psychology, Victoria University of Wellington, sue.jackson{at}vuw.ac.nz In a social climate that largely problematizes young womens sexuality, voices of sexual desire and pleasure may struggle to be heard. Teenage magazines, in actively marketing young womens (hetero)sexuality, offer permission to talk about sex through their problem pages. This article examines letters written to the advice pages of an Australasian teen magazine in which writers articulated or alluded to sexual desire. Using a feminist, poststructuralist analytical approach, the article looks at the ways in which sexual desire is constructed by writers and by agony aunts, how sexual subjectivities are constituted in the text, and the identification of cultural resources drawn on in these constructions. Analyses suggest that attempts to do desire in young womens letters were often undermined or undone in the agony aunts responses, particularly desire for someone of the same gender. The article argues that erasure of desire is deeply ironic, given the magazines sexual content, and misses an important opportunity to encourage talk about desire.
Key Words: advice pages sexual desire sexuality teen magazines young women
Feminism & Psychology, Vol. 15, No. 3,
295-313 (2005) This article has been cited by other articles:
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