Abstract
Research has begun to examine the subjective meanings of virginity and first coitus, but little is known about how these understandings influence the first sexual intercourse event. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between virginity scripts and the approach taken and decisions made during first coitus. A quantitative measure of virginity interpretations (as gift, stigma, or process) was developed based on Carpenter's (Citation2001, Citation2005) qualitative interviews. Participants were university students (184 women and 31 men), all of whom had experienced consensual first penile–vaginal intercourse. Participants completed a quantitative questionnaire in the lab. Fifty-four percent of participants classified themselves as process oriented, 37.7% as gift oriented, and 8.4% as stigma oriented at the time of first coitus. The virginity scripts or frameworks were found to be related to age at first coitus, partner choice, length of relationship with first partner, planning, affective reaction to first coitus, and perceived impact on life. Virginity frameworks were unrelated to contraceptive use at first coitus. Results from this study suggest that Carpenter's virginity frameworks can be successfully translated into quantitative measures that support links between how individuals interpret their virginity and the decisions they make at first coitus.
Acknowledgments
I thank Jonas Eriksson for his helpful comments on an earlier version of this manuscript.
Notes
1In her book, Carpenter (Citation2005) makes reference to a fourth framework, “an act of worship,” which captures the views of a small minority of individuals, typically born-again Christians, who believe in abstinence until marriage. This framework was not incorporated in this study because national data indicate very low levels of religiosity among Canadian youth (Statistics Canada, Citation2006), and my own data suggests negligible religiosity among university students at this university (Humphreys, Citation2012).
Note. N = 215. FCE = first coital experience.
a Length of relationship prior to FCE is an ordinal measure where 1 = hours/days, 2 = 1–3 weeks, 3 = 1–3 months, 4 = 4–6 months, and 5 = 7+ months.
b Length of relationship after FCE is an ordinal measure where 1 = hours/days, 2 = 1–3 weeks, 3 = 1–3 months, 4 = 4–6 months, 5 = 7+ months, and 6 = still together.
*p < .05.
Note. N = 215. FCE = first coital experience.
a Length of relationship prior to FCE is an ordinal measure where 1 = hours/days, 2 = 1–3 weeks, 3 = 1–3 months, 4 = 4–6 months, and 5 = 7+ months.
b Length of relationship after FCE is an ordinal measure where 1 = hours/days, 2 = 1–3 weeks, 3 = 1–3 months, 4 = 4–6 months, 5 = 7+ months, and 6 = still together.
*p < .05.