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Love, in South Africa, can be a dangerous game for girls. Boys use violence in sexual relationships to assert their masculinity. The reliance by some boys, however, on excessive control of girlfriends belies their own vulnerability. How can the ‘normality’ of sexual violence be challenged? Physical assault, rape, and coercive sex have become the norm in male-female relationships in South Africa making it very difficult for young women to protect themselves against unwanted sexual intercourse, pregnancy, HIV infection, and other sexually transmitted diseases. A recent Medical Research Council study involving 30 Xhosa youth aged 16 to 24 from two township schools in the Eastern Cape examined the circumstances and contexts of violence in adolescent sexual relationships. Violence is not only a common feature of sexual relationships, the study found, but also of every day life. Beating is perceived as a normal strategy for punishment and a way of gaining ascendancy and control: husbands beat their wives, parents beat their children, and teachers beat their pupils. For both sexes, sexual relationships and their inherent conflicts are a significant source of emotional stress and disappointment. For girls the main sources of unhappiness in relationships are infidelity, abandonment, excessive male control, forced sex and violence. For boys, the main preoccupation appears to be the threat or the reality that girlfriends are being unfaithful. Masculinity is largely defined by numbers of sexual partners, choice of main partner, and ability to control girlfriends. It is on the whole socially taboo in South Africa not to have a girlfriend. Indeed, acquiring girlfriends to offset the possibility of a relationship ending is common practice. Multiple sexual partners feature in intensely competitive struggles for position and status within the male peer groups. Men are dependent on women submitting to the ‘rules’ of the relationship and to their strategies of control. If girls fail to abide by the rules - reject 'proposals of love', attempt to end a relationship, refuse to have sex or check up on their boyfriend’s fidelity - they must face the violent consequences. Femininity, on the other hand, is based on girls' desirability to the opposite sex. Girls find it difficult to resist violent men for fear of losing the status of having a relationship, and competitiveness within the peer group makes it impossible for girls to admit having been beaten. Further findings reveal that:
For young people to be free from the threat of abuse and inherent vulnerability there needs to be:
Source(s): id21 Research Highlight: 16 July 2001
Further Information: Contact the contributor: woodkm@yahoo.com London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK
Rachel Jewkes Tel:
+27 (0) 12 339 8525 Medical Research Council, South Africa Other related links:
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