Synopses & Reviews
Hookup culture dominates the lives of college students today. Most students spend hours agonizing over their hopes for Friday night and, later, dissecting the evenings successes or failures, often wishing that the social contract of the hookup would allow them to ask for more out of sexual intimacy. The pressure to participate comes from all directions from peers, the media, and even parents. But how do these expectations affect students themselves? And why aren't parents and universities helping students make better-informed decisions about sex and relationships?
In The End of Sex, Donna Freitas draws on her own extensive research to reveal what young men and women really want when it comes to sex and romance. Surveying thousands of college students and conducting extensive one-on-one interviews at religious, secular public, and secular private schools, Freitas discovered that many students men and women alike are deeply unhappy with hookup culture. Meaningless hookups have led them to associate sexuality with ambivalence, boredom, isolation, and loneliness, yet they tend to accept hooking up as an unavoidable part of college life. Freitas argues that, until students realize that there are many avenues that lead to sex and long-term relationships, the vast majority will continue to miss out on the romance, intimacy, and satisfying sex they deserve.
An honest, sympathetic portrait of the challenges of young adulthood, The End of Sex will strike a chord with undergraduates, parents, and faculty members who feel that students deserve more than an endless cycle of boozy one night stands. Freitas offers a refreshing take on this charged topic and a solution that depends not on premarital abstinence or unfettered sexuality, but rather a healthy path between the two.
Review
Publishers Weekly[A] scathing and reasoned attack on the casual-sex culture at American universities
. [Freitas] encourages mindfulness and an open dialogue about what students want to get out of sex, and her remedies (which include temporary periods of abstinence and a return to the traditional date) should provide, if not solutions, at least inspiration for parents and college staff in talking to students about how to have better relationships, and better sex.”
Lauren Sandler, author of Righteous and One and Only
You may think you know about hookup culture, but unless you have read Freitass clear, compassionate, and complete study, you have no idea. Instead of gleaning the state of intimacy of an entire generation from a few subjects, Freitas surveys and interviews thousands of students, and the vast scope of the pervasive hookup culture she discovers is stunning. I recommend this book to men and women alike, students and professors, parents and kidsanyone with a personal or social interest in physical intimacy, emotional intimacy, and the widening chasm in between. Whether you spar with Freitass conclusions, or feel liberated by them, The End of Sex is simply indispensable.”
Synopsis
Hookup culture dominates the lives of college students today, and many feel great pressure to engage in it. This pressure comes from all directions from peers, the media, and even parents. But how do these expectations affect students themselves? And why aren't parents and universities helping students make better-informed decisions about sex and relationships? In
The End of Sex, Donna Freitas uses students own testimonies to define hookup culture and propose ways of opting out for those yearning for meaningful relationships. Unless students can find alternatives to hookup culture, Freitas argues, the vast majority will continue to associate sexuality with ambivalence, boredom, isolation, and loneliness instead of the romance, intimacy, and good sex they want and deserve.
An honest, sympathetic portrait of the challenges of young adulthood, The End of Sex offers a refreshing take on this charged topic and a solution that depends not on premarital abstinence or unfettered sexuality, but rather a healthy path between the two.
About the Author
Donna Freitas is Associate Professor of Religion and Writer in Residence at Hofstra University, and is a Visiting Scholar in Religion at Boston University. She received her Ph.D. from Catholic University in 2002 and her B.A. in philosophy from Georgetown. Freitas regularly contributes to a number of magazines and newspapers, including Beliefnet, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and Christian Century. She is the author of Sex and the Soul: Juggling Sexuality, Spirituality, Romance, and Religion on America's College Campuses, Becoming a Goddess of Inner Poise: Spirituality for the Bridget Jones in All of Us, and three young adult novels.