Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2009

Publication Source

Journal of Sociological Research

Abstract

This project analyzes college students’ narratives buying condoms. Research suggests young persons do not consistently use condoms, and this study will provide an in-depth analysis to students affect toward condoms. We analyzed narratives written by 115 undergraduate students of their condom buying experiences. The vast majority of the students’ narratives about their condom buying experience fit a common framework, with elements including: preplanning, walking in the store, looking inconspicuous while wandering, finding the “hidden” condom location, making their selection, carrying and hiding the condoms, selecting a cashier and rushing through checkout, anticipating ridicule, and walking out of the store. Research indicates that the majority of college-aged persons are sexually active and do not always use protection. We speculate that the negative emotions associated with buying condoms, as repeated in their narratives, may contribute to young people inconsistent use of contraception.

Inclusive pages

1-16

ISBN/ISSN

1948-5468

Document Version

Published Version

Comments

This is an open-access article licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (CC-BY 3.0). Permission documentation is on file.

Publisher

Macrothink Institute

Volume

1

Issue

1

Peer Reviewed

yes

Link to published version

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