10.25377/sussex.10300145.v1
Rachel Thomson
Rachel
Thomson
Interview with Jessica, 18 - 19, White British, working class. Women, Risk and AIDS Project, Manchester, 1989. Original version including fieldnotes (Ref: NMC03)
University of Sussex
2020
Sex Education
AIDS disease
First sex OR Virginity
Marriage
Employment OR Women's employment
Interpersonal relationships
Family life
Sexual behaviour OR Casual sex OR One night stand
Prostitution
Contraceptive devices
Condom use OR Safe sex
AIDS testing
Public health
Comprehensive schools
Students (college)
Sexual abstinence
Love
White British
Working class
Sociology
Sociology not elsewhere classified
2020-03-04 11:10:24
Dataset
https://sussex.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Interview_with_Jessica_18_-_19_White_British_working_class_Women_Risk_and_AIDS_Project_Manchester_1989_Original_version_including_fieldnotes_Ref_NMC03_/10300145
This interview is part of the Women, Risk and Aids Project (1989-90) archive which was created as part of the Reanimating Data Project (2018-20).<div><br></div>Original transcript of an interview with Jessica, who is at college and working towards a career in the police force. She does not see this as a subversion of traditional gender roles, but would have done twenty years earlier. She received no formal Sex Education at her comprehensive, mixed-sex secondary school, and has relied on 'age-appropriate', largely biological information from her parents. She did not received any formal education on AIDS, and what she does know has been learnt from media campaigns and adverts, which she feels were informative. She originally thought AIDS was reserved for gay men, but has had her homophobia and stigma challenged through PSCE in college. She thinks those at highest risk of AIDS are those who are promiscuous and engage in one-night stands and casual sexual encounters. Jessica had not realised that condoms were an effective method of promoting and practicing safe-sex that protects from transmitting AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections or diseases. Her parents had told her about the pill as a form of contraception. Jessica would like to wait until she is married or in love before having sex, and does not feel she is ready yet, but does acknowledge her right to pleasure within a (hetero)- sexual relationship. She likes the idea of security that might come with marriage. She is in a fairly serious heterosexual relationship at the moment with a 22 year old from Scotland, who has not pressured her into having sex. She does not feel there is any pressure from her peers either, as many of them are still virgins, too, but doesn't think she would succumb to pressure either.