All for Him: Articles About Sex in
American Lad Magazines
continued from
RESULTS
Main Topics of Articles About Sex
Only a handful of the topics coded were represented as main
topics of articles in the sample. The most common topic was what women like
(37 articles or 41%); this was followed by unorthodox sexual behaviors or
positions (18 articles or 20%) and
improving sex life (17 articles or 19%).
Articles focused on unorthodox locations for sex (6 articles or 7%),
improving women's orgasms (3 articles or 3%),
men's sexual health issues,
and sexual satisfaction (1 article or 1% each) were also identified. Eight
articles did not have an identifiable main topic that fit the coding scheme.
Perhaps as relevant as what is present is what is missing;
there were no articles focused on alternative sexualities (gay men,
lesbians) whatsoever. There was also an absence of any articles focused on
risks associated with pregnancy (pregnancy, abortion, STDs, HIV/AIDS) or the
prevention of those risks (safe sex, vasectomy, condoms). The sole article
focused on sexual health consisted entirely of trivia that pertained to
sexual functioning and health, such as the effect of zinc on sperm motility
and reasons used to justify circumcision.
Secondary Topics
In addition to coding for a single, dominant topic for each
article, coders also indicated all topics that received substantial mention
within each article. A substantial mention was one that was considered to be
clear and relatively unambiguous. For example, in an article whose main
topic is what women like, an explicit statement about group sex would be
coded as a substantial mention of unorthodox sexual behaviors; a veiled
reference to the same behavior such as a reference to "heading down the hall
together" would not be coded.
The most common secondary topic was improving sex life,
present in 47 of 91 articles (52%). This was followed closely by unorthodox
sexual behaviors (39 articles or 43%), unorthodox sexual locations (35
articles or 38%), drugs or alcohol (34 articles or 37%), and what women like
(33 articles or 36%) (for all frequencies, see Table II). Of these, only
drugs and alcohol were not among the most frequent main topics as well.
Clearly, a few topics overwhelmingly dominate articles about sex in American
lad magazines. If young men are using these magazines as sources of sex
education, they are learning about a very limited range of topics.
Intersections Between Topics
Several intersections exist between the more common main and
secondary topics that may shed additional light onto the content of articles
about sex in these magazines. For example, articles that are principally
focused on what women like are also very likely to contain messages about
improving men's sex life (25 of 37); in fact, chi-square analysis suggests
that they were significantly more likely to contain such messages than
expected by chance, even given the overall frequency of such messages in
articles on all topics, [chi square] = 18.64, p < .001. Articles principally
focused on what women want were also more likely to contain mention of
unorthodox sexual practices than would be expected by chance, [chi square] =
16.62, p = .002, but no more likely to mention unorthodox sexual locations,
[chi square] = 4.50, n.s.
There were insufficient mentions of sexual health topics to
conduct any sort of statistical analysis, but it is interesting to note
where these mentions did occur. Three of the five mentions of safe sex
occurred in articles focused on unorthodox sexual behaviors; the other two
were in articles with no identifiable main topic. There were no mentions of
safe sex in articles primarily about what women want, and only two such
articles mentioned condoms. On the other hand, nearly one-half of all
articles that mentioned condoms were primarily about unorthodox sexual
behaviors or locations; specific examples of such articles concern the
convenience of having sex in public places where condom machines are located
and deride the masculinity of a man who opens a box of condoms in front of a
new sexual partner. Articles that included mentions of other men's sexual
health topics were predominantly focused on improving readers' sex lives or
on unorthodox sexual practices, and they often took the form of unusual
trivia, such as the percentage of sperm that are fertile in the average man.
Relationship States
Of 91 articles about sex, 73 were coded as stating or
clearly implying a single dominant relationship state presumed to be the
context for sexual activity. The most common relationship state was serious
dating (44 articles). These articles often made explicit references to
committed relationship roles by referring to "your girlfriend" or "your
girl." Others implied such a relationship with a combination of mentions of
longer relationships and expectations of sexual exclusivity. The next most
common relationship state was strangers (17 articles). The first date (3
articles), a casual dating relationship (3 articles), and nonromantic
acquaintances (4 articles) also received some attention. Only one article
presumed engagement or marriage as a context for sex.
Most articles that depicted serious dating as the context
for sexual activity portrayed it ambivalently. Only 15 articles in this
group were coded as strictly positive or negative toward the serious dating
relationship; the rest conveyed a combination of both. Most of the articles
(27 of 44 or 61%) were moderately positive about serious dating
relationships; of these, 10 were also moderately negative, and 8 were mildly
negative. Only two articles were rated as highly positive toward serious
dating relationships, and only two were rated as highly negative.
Relationship positivity overall was mild to moderate (M = 1.52, SD = .73);
relationship negativity was just slightly lower (M = 1.27, SD = .84).
Similar patterns emerged for articles that depicted
strangers as the relationship context for sex. None of these articles
portrayed this context as extremely positive or negative, and most articles
were ambivalent (11 of 17, or 65%). Scores for positivity seem to be
slightly higher than scores for negativity (M = 1.53, SD = .80 and M = 1.00,
SD = .70, respectively).
The one article that featured married sex was also
ambivalent. The article discussed the practice of married couples inviting
another individual to join them in group sex as both an enlightened practice
for the most sincerely committed and as an attempt to breathe life into the
impractical, unrealistic sexual world that is marriage.
Images
All articles in the sample were accompanied by at least one
photograph, and so all were included in the following analysis. Of the 91
articles in the sample, 89 were accompanied by a picture of a woman; the
median explicitness was 2, or "begin disrobing." This was also the modal
category (43 articles), followed by discreet nudity (21 articles), and
suggestive appearance (17 articles). Only one article was accompanied by an
image that met the description of nudity. Nearly one-half of the articles in
the sample (45) included a picture of a man, although the median
explicitness was much lower than that for women (Md = .40). Most images (25)
were not explicit; nine articles included an image of a man suggestively
attired, 10 were partially disrobed, and one exhibited discreet male nudity.
Thirty-seven articles included photographs of men and women
together; of these, 17 included a depiction of intimate contact, and five
included a depiction of very intimate contact. Simple contact occurred in
nine articles, and no contact in six.
Articles accompanied by images of multiple women were also
fairly common (33 articles). Most of these depicted no contact (9) or simple
contact (14) between or among the women in the photograph; a few (9)
depicted intimate contact, and one depicted very intimate contact between
two women. Only nine articles in the sample included more than one man; of
these, seven depicted no contact between the men, and the other two depicted
simple contact.
DISCUSSION
The most common topics of articles about sex in American lad
magazines are what women want, how to improve one's sex life, and unorthodox
sexual positions and locations. The last three of this group were expected
and consistent with cultural norms that describe sex in generally
androcentric terms and male sexuality as oriented toward maximizing variety.
The fact that the most common topic, what women want, seems, at first
glance, to be inconsistent with this pattern will be taken up later.
continue
Written in: 2/05. Last reviewed 11/05.
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