Abstract
Introduction
Drinking alcohol with sex is common among young adults (ages 18–30 years) and has been the focus of much research in the health and social sciences (Cho and Yang, 2023; George, 2019; Wagenaar et al., 2018), such as in recent gender-based analyses (Hunt et al., 2021; Wilkinson and Wilkinson, 2020). The use of alcohol with sex can ease social and sexual encounters by facilitating connection and reducing inhibitions, including among gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (GBTQ) men and others with non-(hetero)normative sexual relations and practices (Holmes et al., 2021; Goodyear et al., 2023). However, drinking with sex is also implicated in adverse sexual health experiences and outcomes. One meta-analysis of 50 studies identified associations between young people’s alcohol use and numerous “risky sexual behaviours,” including early sexual initiation, inconsistent condom use, and having multiple sexual partners, with risks varying by gender, sexual orientation, and other contextual factors (Cho and Yang, 2023). Critically, work in this sphere has also established links between alcohol use and the violation of sexual consent, including sexual aggression and violence, most often (yet not exclusively) perpetrated by men (Abbey, 2011; Norona et al., 2021).
In many contemporary contexts, including Canada, where the current study is set, young men (and others) are increasingly navigating issues of alcohol use and sexual consent in an evolving social milieu featuring the #MeToo movement and its empowering of sexual assault survivors to be heard and recognized, and for perpetrators of sexual violence to be held accountable (Boyle and Rogers, 2020; Gaspar et al., 2021; Jaffe et al., 2021). #MeToo has indeed sparked widespread re-examinations of sexual consent, including in potentially compromising and non-ideal situations, such as when using alcohol with sex (i.e. before, during, after). This is significant insofar as, while past work has suggested sexual assaults involving alcohol are less likely to be acknowledged, survivors’ perceptions of these experiences are neither universal nor static and are heavily shaped by social context (Jaffe et al., 2021). Of note, Jaffe et al.’s (2021) study of perceptions of sexual assault since the #MeToo movement began found that trends in average acknowledgement have changed over time and are also influenced by sexual assault characteristics, including degree of intoxication. Evolving discourses around sexual victimization in the era of #MeToo have heretofore centered the experiences of women and girls, though there has been growing interest in examining the movement’s implications for men and queer communities (Gaspar et al., 2021). Still, more work is needed to uncover how young men—across diverse groups (e.g. cisgender, heterosexual, and GBTQ men) and contexts (e.g. with sex involving alcohol) —are making sense of sexual consent discourses alongside our shifting socio-cultural landscape, including in connection with evolving gender norms and sexual scripts.
While young people of all genders use alcohol with sex, young men are most often accused, charged, and convicted as the perpetrators of sexual violence, including and perhaps especially when alcohol is involved (Carline et al., 2017; Garcia et al., 2019). However, it is critical to emphasize that sexual violence (encompassing sexual harassment, violation, and assault) is also known to occur and be under-reported among men (Dame et al., 2020; Depraetere et al., 2018), with disproportionately high rates among younger men and GBTQ men (Dame et al., 2020; Rothman et al., 2011). Sociological theories link men’s conquest, sexual prowess and/or aggressions to hypermasculine cultures (Connell, 2005; Murnen, 2015) wherein the pursuit of status, toughness, and antifemininity are foundational to many young men’s masculine identities. In this context, Weiss (2010a) theorizes that men who are victims to sexual violence contradict hegemonic definitions of men’s sexuality that require them to be sexually potent, dominant, and in control; and that men who deny or resist another’s sexual advances can be scrutinized as violating codes of male (hyper)sexuality. These arguments are substantiated by Weiss’s (2010a, 2010b) findings about how men with diverse sexual orientations seek to reassert masculinity following sexual victimization, including by blaming alcohol consumption for their loss of control and vulnerability. Gender relations as socially constructed practices have, across a continuum of social contexts, shaped the ways in which drinking can influence normative understandings and parameters for sexual consent and victimization. To this point, research with cisgender, heterosexual young adults reported that intoxicated sex can involve a reconfiguration of what are considered to be acceptable practices, in ways that are shaped by gender norms and cultural sexual scripts (Hunt et al., 2021).
Social sciences and humanities scholarship has sought to identify the conditions needed for consensual sex to occur, including when autonomy is potentially compromised by alcohol use. As Kukla (2021) argues in “
Young men’s alcohol use and negotiation of sexual consent are shaped by masculine and feminine ideals. Dominant discourses of masculinity prize sexual prowess as a characteristic of successful masculinity—evidenced by conquest—and the pursuit of, and by, potential partners to validate and affirm that masculine capital (Anderson, 2009; Connell, 2005). The antithesis of this can be conceived as rejection and contested (masculine) identities within young men’s dating and hook-up cultures, with the longer-term risk of men not attracting a partner at all. In this context, alcohol as a potential connector can heighten hopes, loosen uncertainties and be the potentiator of (and disclaimer for) risk and young men’s risk-taking (Holmes et al., 2021; Iwamoto et al., 2011). As such, the performativity of drinking and the perceived prizes that can accompany such practices are understood as normative among young men (Hunt and Antin, 2019; Iwamoto et al., 2011; Petersson and Plantin, 2019). That is, by drinking, inhibitions are reduced, and the utopia of connectedness otherwise lost to everyday shyness and the often-awkward formative years may be seen as being more attainable. There are, however, strong countering discourses of masculinity whereby sex is not (only) about such hedonistic conquest-based masculinities but rather ensuring care of and mutual pleasure for men’s sexual partner(s) (Hunt et al., 2021; Wilkinson and Wilkinson, 2020). Protection of partners similarly counts as a dominant discourse of masculinity, while intoxication can be used to explain momentary lapses, with alcohol as a justification for such deviations as state-based rather than reflective of masculine shortcomings (Carline et al., 2017; Hunt et al., 2021). Contemporary masculine discourses inclusive of the practices above have been shaped by #MeToo (Gaspar et al., 2021; Jaffe et al., 2021), calling into question alcohol use and sexual consent in the retrospective amid forever changed terrain. Yet despite the eruption of the #MeToo movement globally, we know surprisingly little about how diverse young men are navigating sexual consent within this evolving social milieu and in non-ideal contexts, such as sex involving alcohol. Therefore, our aim in the present study is to identify young men’s discourses of alcohol use and sexual consent.
Methods
Positionality and theoretical perspectives
We approached this study as an interdisciplinary research team with training in nursing, public health, social work, and sociology. The lead author is a young cisgender queer man who, through his nursing practice and personal and community experiences, had developed some familiarity with interconnections between alcohol use, sex, and consent. Our broader authorship team includes men and women of diverse sexual identities (straight, bisexual, and gay) who are invested in researching and promoting young people’s community care practices, including in the context of sexual consent, with much of our work focused on advancing equity with sexual and gender minorities. For this study, we drew on Kukla’s (2021) non-ideal theory of sexual consent alongside critical and inclusive analyses of masculinities (Anderson, 2009; Connell, 2005). Following Connell (2005), we define masculinities as social and cultural structures that influence men’s (and others’) identities, practices, and relations. These effects of masculinity, including masculine hegemony, are known to be discursively (re-)produced and contested amid men’s everyday lives (Anderson, 2009; Connell, 2005), including in contexts of alcohol use, sex, and consent. In leveraging a critical, inclusive masculinities framework with Kukla’s (2021) non-ideal theory of sexual consent, we directed this study toward examining and disentangling a sexually diverse sample of young men’s discourses of alcohol use and sexual consent.
Methodology
This qualitative study deploys discourse analysis as the overarching research design. Discourse analysis is a usefully deconstructive approach to examining social processes that (re)produce knowledge and power relations through systems and structures, which constitute how specific “issues” (e.g. alcohol, sex, and consent) are understood, experienced, and discussed (Fairclough, 2003). With discourse analysis, we sought to analyze the dynamics, contexts, and effects of how young men talk about consent, ethical sex, and alcohol use. This involved positioning the speakers (young men) as both affected by, and engaging in, the construction of normative meanings of (ethical or non-ethical) sex they are having when using alcohol. Thus, we attended not only to the narratives recounted to us by young men, but also to how these narratives may constitute taken-for-granted knowledges, and the transpiring of social actions and interactions (i.e. discourses) related to sexual consent in the context of alcohol use.
Sampling and recruitment procedures
This study extends from a broader program of research exploring young men’s use of substances (including alcohol) with sex. A stratified purposive sampling strategy (Knight et al., 2017) was used to ensure the sample comprised wide-ranging participants within the criterion of young men, including men of diverse sexual and ethnocultural identities. We recruited participants by posting study advertisements over social media (Facebook, Instagram) and across clinical and community sites. These included a youth-driven non-profit organization, a men’s sexual health and primary care clinic, and two community-based research offices focusing on men’s sexual health and young people’s alcohol and other substance use. Recruitment materials were titled with the name of this study, “Sociocultural Contexts and Young Men’s Sexual Lives,” and indicated that researchers were seeking to interview young men about sexual health and substance use. The specific eligibility criteria were as follows: live within Metro Vancouver, fluent in English, self-identify as a man, between 15 and 30 years of age, currently or previously sexually active, and have used substances (any) with sex. Participants provided informed consent and received a CDN $30 honorarium. Ethics approval was obtained from the University of British Columbia Behavioural Research Ethics Board (##H16-01915-A013).
Data collection
We conducted in-depth, semi-structured interviews with 76 young men. Individual interviews (Jan 2018–Feb 2021) ranged in length form 1 to 2 hours and took place at research offices in downtown Vancouver; 10 interviews were held remotely over Zoom following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. The interview guides were structured to elicit comprehensive discussion of participants’ perspectives, experiences, and contexts of using substances (inclusive of but not limited to alcohol) with sex. The primary interview question serving the current investigation was: “
Data analysis
The dataset was initially categorized using a preconfigured codebook, which our team developed by drawing on prior research experiences, engaging with the sexualized substance use literature, and using constant-comparison and open-coding techniques with the initial transcripts (Charmaz, 2014). Data immersion was facilitated by undertaking a related thematic analysis leveraging the same dataset (Goodyear et al., 2023). This study found that using alcohol before sex can influence young men’s perceived capacitates for navigating conversations about, and actions related to, consent in the context of sexualized alcohol use. Yet, we completed that analysis without unpacking the normative considerations young men raise (or do not raise) about their understandings of alcohol use and sexual consent amid evolving social contexts. Thus, for the current investigation, we revisited the dataset and focused on data coded as “sexualized use of substances,” “depressants” (including alcohol, toward which we focused our attention), and “sexual coercion and consent.” Our inquiry was advanced by pulling apart and analyzing data coded at “sex, gender, and sexual orientation” and “culture” (e.g. queer cultures and dating/hook-up cultures). The lead author iteratively grouped and collapsed different configurations of these codes whilst reviewing the corresponding data pulls. The coded data and full transcripts were further examined to develop preliminary insights about young men’s discourses of alcohol use and sexual consent. Data were managed using NVivo 12 and Microsoft Excel software.
We used standard practices of discourse analysis to enhance and transform our early insights, including analyzing both textual and contextual elements of the data, and interrogating explicit (e.g. self-disclosures and debates) and implicit (e.g. assumptions and values) threads of consent-related discourse (Fairclough, 2003). To develop overarching conceptual categories, we examined the meaning and social effects we (and participants) ascribed to the textual data while concurrently exploring interconnections between power relations, ethical considerations (e.g. with respect to autonomy and capacity), and young men’s contemporary understandings of consent. This involved us critically examining
Findings
The 76 young men in this study were between the ages of 18 and 30 years (mean = 23.9). Of these, 71 identified as cisgender men and 5 as transgender men. Participants identified as gay (
Careful connections: Discourses of care, connection, and control
In describing how alcohol featured in their sexual encounters, the young men were strongly influenced by a discursive frame of careful connections. The men invoked discourses of “care” and “connection” as they underscored their efforts to proactively consider and openly talk about dynamics of consent in the context of sex involving alcohol. Frequently, they described consuming small amounts of alcohol prior to having sex, with the aim of pre-establishing or strengthening a sense of connectedness. Moreover, having social drinks prior to sex allotted space for discussion of sexual preferences, histories, and boundaries, thereby helping to facilitate sexual safety. This was especially so for participants who wanted to cultivate conditions for care and connection in advance of having sex with someone for the first time. For example, Valentina shared his reasons for connecting over alcohol and cannabis before sex:
As above, in contrast to dominant discourses of masculinity and men’s sexuality—which can emphasize stoicism and libido—participants positioned themselves as assessing and deciding consent through some level of relational connection with new partners. This self-construction seemed to be especially prominent among—but not restricted to—the young GBTQ men we interviewed. These participants tended to invoke the discursive frame of careful connections when describing how alcohol can serve as a mechanism to connect and disinhibit, often in rather calculated ways, such as to buy some time to scaffold the conditions for ethical consent to occur.
Other key aspects of this discursive frame were men’s concerns about how their capacity to have command over situations when using alcohol too heavily could impair capacities for responsible sexual decision-making, notably in circumstances in which they or their sexual partner(s) may be especially vulnerable. In tension with expectations of normative masculinity and young men’s “risk-taking,” a discourse of “control” reflects how participants tended to take great care when actively choosing to use alcohol with sex. Evident was men’s desire to feel relaxed but cognisant and with some level of control in their sexual encounters, making informed risk assessments as they first connected with sexual partners. For example, in the context of having drinks prior to sex, Manuel, a 19-year-old gay man, shared that he will take the time to consider “
As Mark illustrates, the discursive frame of careful connections reflects the care for self and others that men describe having when alcohol is involved with sex. Participants indicated that heavy intoxication could tilt sexual risk levels and power dynamics toward the unacceptable whilst obscuring capacity for meaningful connection, at times outweighing the desire for pleasure and physical release. In turn, they surfaced the need to establish careful and caring connections that were frequently buttressed by notions of masculine responsibility of caring for both self and others. Yet, this motivation to care for self and others occasionally came in conflict as men strove to avoid coming across as paternalistic or controlling of their sexual partners’ choices. This can be seen in Mark’s self-reflective comment, “
Young men leveraged the discursive frame of careful connections when characterizing their (often cautious) lead-up to sex involving alcohol, including as they recognized and worked to mitigate the possibility of sexual consent being breached. Indeed, although using alcohol in small amounts could facilitate care, connection, and control with sex, doing so could also function as a double-edged sword of sorts, most notably in contexts of heavy drinking or disparate levels of intoxication. Here, participants seemed keenly aware of the risk for getting lost in the moment and for “lines to be crossed” amid sexualized alcohol use, thereby prompting them to pre-emptively look out for their own sexual safety and that of their sexual partners. The criticality of careful connections when drinking was emphasized by Finch, a 24-year-old straight man:
At times, the young men invoked an ideal of “intoxication parity” (Hunt et al., 2021) as one prominent strategy to avoid sexual encounters that could later be characterized as having lacked enthusiastic, genuine consent. With this approach, participants emphasized that consensual sex is best achieved when all parties have consumed only small amounts of alcohol (or none whatsoever) and are still “in control,” or when sexual partners are equally intoxicated and ostensibly operating with the same degree of control. This discourse, and men’s desire to promote more equal power relations and conditions for fair play, featured in both casual sexual encounters and established relationships, though with seemingly more leeway in the latter context. For instance, Byron shared:
By centering discourses of care, connection, and control in contexts of sexualized alcohol use, the young men actively worked to promote sexual and decisional autonomy as they looked out for themselves and their sex partners. Yet, as our analysis progressed, it became clear that there were also potentially autonomy-compromising situations involving sex and alcohol.
Watering it down: Discourses of disinhibition, deflection, and denial
Participants’ perceptions and experiences of violated consent in the context of sex involving alcohol were frequently embedded within a discursive frame of “watering it down.” This frame involved men normalizing alcohol use as the primary cause of sexual coercion and assault, while concomitantly deflecting and denying the role and responsibility of men. In this context, participants deployed discourses of deflection to emphasize how the disinhibiting effects of alcohol could compromise men’s decisional autonomy, with several emphasizing how alcohol could directly disrupt their self-control when it came to opportunities for having sex with impaired partners. Evident in the quote from Finch below, sexual assault can be framed as a direct consequence of (women) drinking too much. In this scenario, the unequal gendered dynamics of sexual assault risk are acknowledged yet subsequently denied:
Finch positioned himself and heterosexual men more generally as somewhat disinhibited to the point of being “unaware” of the potential consequences for their actions when too much alcohol was involved. Aligning with dominant discourses of masculinity prizing sexual conquest as an ideal of a drunken night out, there was a disregard for the woman’s agency and denial of the man’s culpability for not ensuring that, thereby reflecting, and reinforcing heteronormative misogyny. Indeed, Finch and others actively deflected notions of violation by conflating alcohol (over)use and sexual consent for both parties, emphasizing instead that risk resides with men’s partner(s). This deflection of responsibility was even more pronounced as men explicitly spoke of alcohol use, sexual assault, and issues of power and consequence. For example, Brazil claimed “expertise” regarding the gendered power dimensions that are animated in the context of men’s alcohol overuse, whilst discursively separating himself from men’s predatory practices. In doing so, he emphatically described alcohol as a “
The men constructed alcohol as a potentiator for sexual violence to occur, regardless of who (aggressor, victim, or both) was intoxicated. Pertinent examples surfacing across our interviews included experiences of hazing, sexual humiliation, and sexual entitlement. For example, Lorne, a 24-year-old man who identified as gay and trending toward asexual, shared an experience of having witnessed multiple intoxicated people sexually assault an unconscious, severely intoxicated man at a bathhouse. While this participant understood and acknowledged that performing sexual acts with an unconscious person is unacceptable (because it is rape), he seemingly deflected the wrongness of this event by attributing it to alcohol intoxication, commenting: “
Lee discursively reveals an understanding of the sexual assault that had occurred, even using the language of “survivor” to refer to the victim, while successively watering down the impact of the event as men “being men” and using alcohol (“
Evidence of young men deflecting the responsibility of sexual assaults due to alcohol use also featured within the interviews of those who shared with us that they had previously experienced sexual violation. For example, Sandy framed his personal and peer experiences of sexual violation as the direct “result” of having consumed alcohol. Concerningly, he goes so far as to position himself and his friend and partner as “lucky” for each having “only” been sexually assaulted once, given their heavy alcohol use at that time of their lives. This experience ultimately led him to cease or at least reduce his alcohol use:
Participants sometimes constructed themselves as “at risk” and more vulnerable to sexual violation while intoxicated. To this point, Ryley, a 19-year-old gay man, cautioned that being intoxicated “
Notwithstanding that alcohol and violence can intersect in complex ways, the discursive frame of “watering it down” served to background the role of men and masculinity in experiences of sexual violence. Yet, some began to critically interrogate how this discursive framing could deflect notions of responsibilization away from the sexual perpetrator; for example, Jacob, a 22-year-old straight man, reflected, “
Blurred lines: Discourses of a continuum of consent and “meeting (masculine) expectations”
The discursive frame of “blurred lines” emerged as young men discussed a continuum of sexual consent, including the legitimacy of (violated) consent in the context of sex involving alcohol. Evident was participants “meeting (masculine) expectations” when talking about personal experiences and community norms of sexual violation while intoxicated, and of having followed through with sexual encounters they subsequently came to regret. These discourses manifested as the young men recounted instances in which they had (drunkenly) taken part in sexual encounters where there had been low levels of interest, yet where they proceeded anyway due to perceptions of pressure and expectation from their sexual partner(s), peers, and/or themselves. When looking back on these experiences and the discord between men’s feelings and actions, participants sometimes second-guessed whether they had even wanted the sexual encounters to occur. The ways in which they deployed these discourses suggested that, at times, following masculine discourses that prize sexual desire and performance led these young men into sex they had not been enthusiastic about—or had outright declined. Indeed, this “pressure” young men described facing when deciding whether to have sex seemed tied up in broader masculine norms, with men’s pursuit of sexual prowess shaping their overall decision-making and, in some cases, their susceptibility to sexual coercion and assault. For example, Brazil (introduced above) questioned the appropriateness of sexual activity he had participated in drunk, whilst concurrently implying that he felt he had an onus to follow through on the sexual activity:
A salient feature of the continuum of consent discourse is how young men muddied the waters of what sexual consent
Participants’ views on the continuum of sexual consent and violation varied widely. Both cisgender, heterosexual men and GBTQ men recounted experiences of sexual violation, many of which were downplayed or dismissed (whether by themselves or others) when disclosed. Graham, a 22-year-old gay man, detailed an incident of “stealthing” wherein his sexual partner removed the condom Graham was wearing, without his knowledge or awareness (which he described as being altered because he had been intoxicated). Once Graham discovered that the condom had been removed, he and his partner disagreed on whether doing so had been appropriate, leaving Graham to reflect “
As above, young men took up—and occasionally contested—the discursive frame of blurred lines wherein there was no objective consensus of what constitutes (or does not constitute) violated consent. This sense of a lack of clarity was evident in the perspective of Lorne, who, in recounting a sexual assault in his peer network, commented, “
Although complicit in sustaining a masculinity that prizes sexual conquest, Peter simultaneously concedes having been marginalized and discursively positions alcohol as the excusatory factor for giving into that marginality. Yet, even when the young men explicitly recognized that consent had been violated amid sexualized alcohol use, they tended to downplay the seriousness of these encounters. Doing so involved men employing the blurred lines discursive frame whereby they talked up the role of alcohol and related influences (e.g. peer pressure and partying) in shaping these sexual encounters, seemingly to draw focus away from the violation itself and to avoid being framed as a victim. These processes of deflection were caught up in hegemonic masculinity and norms around male (hyper)sexuality. Indeed, Drake, a 20-year-old bisexual man, shared that young men’s sexual scripts—what he called “
Participants’ ambiguity about consent in contexts of sexualized alcohol use was heavily embedded in the discursive frame of blurred lines. Here, the discourse of a continuum of consent manifested as men rationalized the “messiness” of consent amid sexualized alcohol use. This even occurred as men recounted past sexual violations, the legitimacy of which they sometimes downplayed by talking up the role of alcohol in shaping these encounters whilst concurrently uplifting a discourse of “meeting (masculine) expectations” during sex.
Discussion
This study examines young men’s discourses of alcohol use and sexual consent to identify the dynamics, contexts, and practical effects of those experiences. Participants centered a discursive frame of careful connections when discussing their efforts to actively promote sexual and decisional autonomy as they look out for themselves and their sexual partners when drinking. Conversely, they invoked discourses of disinhibition, deflection, and denial to normalize alcohol use as the primary cause of sexual violence and downplay the role and responsibility of men. Finally, the young men operationalized discourses of a continuum of consent and of “meeting (masculine) expectations” when talking about personal experiences and community norms for alcohol use and sexual consent, including as they discussed sexual violence and victimization while intoxicated. These findings shed light on young men’s discursive understandings of sexual consent in the context of alcohol use, highlighting how young men construct and contest the kinds of (ethical or non-ethical) sex they are having under non-ideal and potentially autonomy-compromising conditions.
Findings from this study and specifically the discursive frame of
This study’s analysis of the
Young men in this study occasionally expressed confusion and unease when invoking the discursive frame of “blurred lines,” including as they recounted experiencing sexual victimization while intoxicated yet of having felt unsure—in the moment or in hindsight—whether sexual consent had truly been violated. This finding extends upon prior research indicating that most men who have experienced sexual victimization do not label this as sexual abuse or rape (Artime et al., 2014), as well as more recent work suggesting that some GBTQ men are questioning the acceptability of sexual practices they may have once passed as “acceptable” before #MeToo and shifting community norms and boundaries around sexual consent (Gaspar et al., 2021). Conflicting feelings and difficult conceptualizations of sexual consent and sexual assault are well documented and have even been theorized in connection with gender role stereotypes about masculine invulnerability and sexual insatiability, which contribute to the under-reporting, late reporting, and limited help-seeking among men who experience sexual violence (Artime et al., 2014; Petersson and Plantin, 2019; Weiss, 2010a, 2010b). This under-reporting and conventional masculinity norms also intersect with commonly held myths about “male rape” (Artime et al., 2014; Boyle and Rogers, 2020), such as “it is impossible. . . to rape a man” and “men [who are raped] are to blame for not escaping” (Struckman-Johnson and Struckman-Johnson, 1992: 90), with these myths discursively positioning men as strong and always in the mood for sex. The present study provides related insights into young men’s drive to meet (masculine) expectations and their perceptions of sexual victimization while intoxicated, though continued research is needed to explore these dynamics and men’s evolving understandings and acknowledgment of sexual assault and victimhood.
Findings on the discursive frame of
This study has strengths and limitations. The large, sexually diverse sample and study design focused on prevailing findings across the sample rather than differences between subgroups of men. The limitation herewith is that temporal changes and within-sample differences across young men’s experiences cannot be fully determined. This study being set in Canada also limits the reach and representative of the findings to locales grappling with similar challenges around alcohol use and sexual consent. Longitudinal, multi-locale, and intersectional studies could further illuminate the gendered dimensions of young men’s alcohol use and sexual consent.
Conclusion
This study offers empirical and normative insights into GBTQ and cisgender, heterosexual young men’s discourses of alcohol use and sexual consent. Findings on discourses of care, connection, and control underscore the ways in which young men use small(er) quantities of alcohol to foster ethical and consensual sexual encounters. Meanwhile, findings on discourses of disinhibition, deflection, and denial capture young men’s backgrounding of their own role and responsibility vis-à-vis sexual violence, directing attention instead to alcohol’s influences. Finally, discourses of a continuum of consent and of “meeting (masculine) expectations” reflect how young men understand and are affected by personal and community experiences of sexual violation. Taken together, these discourses provide insights into the gendered nature of sexual violence and the extent to which idealized notions of sexual consent play out in the everyday lives of young men who use alcohol with sex. These findings underscore the ways in which discourses of masculinity can enrol men in sexual violence, as both offenders and victims, and carry important philosophical and pragmatic implications for contemporary efforts to scaffold sexual consent, including in non-ideal contexts such as sex involving alcohol.
