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TEENAGE GIRLS, FEMALE FRIENDSHIP AND THE MAKING OF THE SEXUAL REVOLUTION IN ENGLAND, 1950–1980

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 October 2019

HANNAH CHARNOCK*
Affiliation:
University of Bristol
*
Department of History, University of Bristol, 13–15 Woodland Road, Bristol, BS8 1TB [email protected]

Abstract

How can we explain rising levels of pre-marital sex in post-war Britain? Focusing on the experiences of young women growing up in Britain between 1950 and 1980, this article argues that changes in sexual practice were brought about by shifts in the social value of sexual knowledge and experience. While the figure of the ‘nice girl’ was still central to understandings of respectable femininity, across this period social status and reputation became linked to demonstrations of attractiveness and sexual knowing. For girls of the post-war generation, discussions of sex were central to how they related to those around them, and the decisions that teenagers made about their own sexual practice were informed by their perceptions of what their friends and peers would think of them. The article argues that, by considering the history of sexuality at a ‘local’ scale between the macro-level of culture and the micro-level of individual sexual selfhood, we not only gain an important new perspective on the everyday sexual experience but also uncover new processes of socio-sexual change.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019

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Footnotes

The author would like to thank James Freeman, Amy Edwards, Andy Flack, Josie McLellan, and the anonymous reviewers for their thoughtful comments on earlier drafts of this work. Thanks also to the Trustees of the Mass Observation Archive, University of Sussex, for permitting the use of archive material.

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