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You Couldn't Say "No", Could You?: Young Men's Understandings of Sexual RefusalSchool of Psychology, Murdoch University, Murdoch, 6150, Western Australiar.obyrne{at}murdoch.edu.au
School of International, Cultural and Community Studies, Edith Cowan University, Joondalup, 6027, Western Australia. m.rapley{at}ecu.edu.au
School of Psychology, Murdoch University, Murdoch, 6150, Western Australia. s.hansen{at}murdoch.edu.au While several psychological theories of rape have been developed, Tannen's miscommunication model is dominant, informing expert and popular accounts alike. Rape is constructed as an extreme example of miscommunication whereby women's failure to say no is interpreted by men as sexual consent. Kitzinger and Frith have demonstrated that young women have an implicit understanding of the normative interactional structure of refusal, and it is this that explains their difficulty in just saying no to unwanted sex. However, Kitzinger and Frith's study could not demonstrate, but only argue, that young men share this sophisticated understanding, such that women saying no should not be necessary to refuse sexual intimacy. Here we extend Kitzinger and Frith's study, via the analysis of data from two focus groups held with young men. We demonstrate that, as Kitzinger and Frith suggested, men not only do have a refined ability to hear verbal refusals that do not contain the word no, but also and importantly an equally refined ability to hear the subtlest of non-verbal sexual refusals.
Key Words: conversation analysis date rape discursive psychology miscommunication young men
Feminism & Psychology, Vol. 16, No. 2,
133-154 (2006) This article has been cited by other articles:
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