Book contents
- Intimate Relationships Across Cultures
- Advances in Personal Relationships
- Intimate Relationships Across Cultures
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Spotlights
- Collaborators
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Why Was This Book Written?
- 1 How Do We Know What Matters in Intimate Relationships?
- 2 Why Do People Seek Intimate Relationships?
- 3 How Are Intimate Partners Selected?
- 4 What Is Love and How Is Intimacy Expressed?
- 5 How Do Sexual Attitudes and Behaviors Matter?
- 6 What Are the Dynamics of Exchange and Power?
- 7 How Do Couples Cope with Conflict?
- 8 How Do External Factors Matter in Intimate Relationships?
- 9 How Do Intimate Relationships Relate to Well-Being?
- 10 How Do the Predictions Combine in Comprehensive Models?
- 11 How Much Do the Levels of Factors Vary?
- 12 What Are the Implications of the Study?
- 13 How Might the Findings Apply to Other Social Relationships?
- Epilogue: What Future Research Is Needed?
- Glossary of Statistical Terms
- Boston Couples Study Publications
- References
- Index
5 - How Do Sexual Attitudes and Behaviors Matter?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 June 2019
- Intimate Relationships Across Cultures
- Advances in Personal Relationships
- Intimate Relationships Across Cultures
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Spotlights
- Collaborators
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Why Was This Book Written?
- 1 How Do We Know What Matters in Intimate Relationships?
- 2 Why Do People Seek Intimate Relationships?
- 3 How Are Intimate Partners Selected?
- 4 What Is Love and How Is Intimacy Expressed?
- 5 How Do Sexual Attitudes and Behaviors Matter?
- 6 What Are the Dynamics of Exchange and Power?
- 7 How Do Couples Cope with Conflict?
- 8 How Do External Factors Matter in Intimate Relationships?
- 9 How Do Intimate Relationships Relate to Well-Being?
- 10 How Do the Predictions Combine in Comprehensive Models?
- 11 How Much Do the Levels of Factors Vary?
- 12 What Are the Implications of the Study?
- 13 How Might the Findings Apply to Other Social Relationships?
- Epilogue: What Future Research Is Needed?
- Glossary of Statistical Terms
- Boston Couples Study Publications
- References
- Index
Summary
In the Boston Couples Study, whether or not the couple had sexual intercourse did not predict whether the couple stayed together during the two years of the original study (Hill, Rubin, & Peplau, 1976), nor did it predict eventual marriage and staying married on the fifteen-year follow-up (Hill & Peplau, 1998).
Interviews revealed that there were three attitudes about love and sex (Peplau, Rubin, & Hill, 1977). Those who were called sexual traditionalists believed that premarital sex was wrong. One man said in an interview that he wanted to have sex with his girlfriend, but she believed it was wrong, so out of love and respect for her he did not pressure her to have sex. Those who were called sexual moderates believed that casual sex was wrong, but that sex was okay when a relationship reached a certain level of love and commitment. And those who were called sexual liberals believed that sex was okay even if you were not in love, and they often found that physical intimacy increased emotional intimacy. It is now understood why that occurs: orgasm releases oxytocin, which promotes emotional bonding (Crenshaw, 1996).
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- Intimate Relationships across CulturesA Comparative Study, pp. 84 - 100Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019