Title
Preserving Abstinence and Preventing Rape: How Sex Education Textbooks Contribute to Rape Culture
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2020
Publication Title
Archives of Sexual Behavior
Abstract
© 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature. Recent academic and popular conversations regarding #MeToo, sexual violence and harassment, and rape culture have begun to focus on K-12 educational spaces in the U.S., but they rarely examine how educational curricula actually foster or combat these dynamics. In this article, we present a qualitative content analysis of health education textbooks, which explores the following question: What implicit and explicit messages do youth receive about sexual violence, and specifically, sexual violence prevention in health education textbooks? As we explored this question, we analyzed the roles that sex education curricula may play in shaping (e.g., contributing to, intervening upon) rape culture. We found the following messages across textbooks: abstinence is the only way to preserve one’s safety; lack of abstinence increases risks, including the risk of being raped; and girls/women must assume personal responsibility and enact strategies that preserve one’s abstinence and prevent them from being raped. This article concludes by teasing out how curricula can shape interactions, relationships, and culture, and by offering recommendations for improving sex education curricula.
DOI
10.1007/s10508-020-01816-6
Recommended Citation
Clonan-Roy, Katherine; Goncy, Elizabeth A.; Naser, Shereen C.; Fuller, Kimberly Anne; DeBoard, Alec; Williams, Alyssa; and Hall, Audrey, "Preserving Abstinence and Preventing Rape: How Sex Education Textbooks Contribute to Rape Culture" (2020). Psychology Faculty Publications. 28.
https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clpsych_facpub/28