Negotiating stigma: Difference between revisions

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(New page: '''Leahy, Terry:''' <blockquote>Negotiating stigma : approaches to intergenerational sex / Terry Leahy. – 2002-05-23 (www.books-reborn.org). – vi, 217 p.; 30 cm. (<small>PDF</small...)
 
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Based on nineteen semi-structured interviews with people who, while they were from eight to sixteen years old, were involved in voluntary intergenerational relationships with adults from seventeen to fifty years of age. The interviewees were between ten and more than fifty years old and of both sexes, as were their adult partners. All considered their relationships as positive experiences and were well aware of the fact that they transgressed against the prohibition against intergenerational sex.
Based on nineteen semi-structured interviews with people who, while they were from eight to sixteen years old, were involved in voluntary intergenerational relationships with adults from seventeen to fifty years of age. The interviewees were between ten and more than fifty years old and of both sexes, as were their adult partners. All considered their relationships as positive experiences and were well aware of the fact that they transgressed against the prohibition against intergenerational sex.
In this study [[Terry Leahy]] poses the question how they dealt with this transgression, minimizing it, in fact.
In this study [[Terry Leahy]] poses the question how they dealt with this transgression, minimizing it, in fact.
[[Category:Official Encyclopedia]]
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[[Category:Sociological Theory]]
[[Category:Research: Broader Perspectives]]
[[Category:Research into effects on Children]]
[[Category:Pubs: Research/Papers]]

Revision as of 15:42, 9 July 2009

Leahy, Terry:

Negotiating stigma : approaches to intergenerational sex / Terry Leahy. – 2002-05-23 (www.books-reborn.org). – vi, 217 p.; 30 cm. (PDF v.1.4, 1185323 B). – ISBN 1 877051 01 2. – Diss. U. NSW, Sydney, 1991

Based on nineteen semi-structured interviews with people who, while they were from eight to sixteen years old, were involved in voluntary intergenerational relationships with adults from seventeen to fifty years of age. The interviewees were between ten and more than fifty years old and of both sexes, as were their adult partners. All considered their relationships as positive experiences and were well aware of the fact that they transgressed against the prohibition against intergenerational sex. In this study Terry Leahy poses the question how they dealt with this transgression, minimizing it, in fact.