Academic literature on the topic 'Courtship norms'

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Journal articles on the topic "Courtship norms"

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Kuzio, Isabelle. "Women in Love: Why Women are Expected to Love First and the Exploration of Changing Gender Roles in Heterosexual Romantic Relationships." Canadian Journal of Family and Youth / Le Journal Canadien de Famille et de la Jeunesse 13, no. 3 (2021): 22–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/cjfy29619.

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This paper explores the misconception that women, being perceived in western society as the most emotional gender, is the first to feel love and to say the words “I love you” in a romantic heterosexual relationship. Research has determined that women are expected to say and feel love in a relationship before men, when in reality the opposite is true. I will discuss social expectations of gender norms in heterosexual relationships and the ways in which relationship norms are currently being challenged. I suggest that changes in courtship norms and media influences on youth create inaccurate gen
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Umali, Edsel. "“Panliligaw at Pamamanhikan”: The Changing Concepts of Filipino Relationship Across Generational Cohorts." Social Science Lens: A World Journal of Human Dynamics and Social Relations 5, no. 1 (2025): 13–22. https://doi.org/10.62718/vmca.ssl-wjhdsr.5.1.sc-0425-002.

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This study examines how the Filipino conceptions of “panliligaw” (courtship) and “pamamanhikan” (supplication) have changed over the course of generations, with an emphasis on how social media, technology, and modernization have altered these long-standing customs. The research, which is based on literature that traces these rites from ancient civilizations to modern Filipino practices, is grounded in historical and cross-cultural viewpoints. The study shows notable generational shifts using qualitative techniques, such as focus group discussions and interviews with 12 participants ranging fro
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Zaini, Abdul Wahid, and Tutik Hamidah. "Transformation of Traditional Values to the Phenomenon of Santri Courtship in the Digital Era." JURNAL ISLAM NUSANTARA 7, no. 2 (2023): 211. http://dx.doi.org/10.33852/jurnalnu.v7i2.508.

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This research aims to analyze how traditional values in Islamic boarding schools have transformed in the context of the dating phenomenon among Islamic boarding school students in the digital era. Using a qualitative phenomenological approach, this research explores the influence of communication technology, such as social media, on student dating, which was previously strictly controlled by Islamic boarding school norms. Data was collected through observations, in-depth interviews, and document analysis, providing an in-depth picture of interactions between students and the use of digital med
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Schilder, Matthijs B. H. "Interventions in a Herd of Semi-Captive Plains Zebras." Behaviour 112, no. 1-2 (1990): 53–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853990x00680.

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AbstractIn a herd of semi-captive plains zebras interventions, which occurred within the harems, were investigated in order to answer the question why zebras interfered. These interventions are of interest because they regulate the contacts between companions and because, as corrective and preventive measures, they reveal the normative principles underlying the behaviours by which animals structure their social environment. An attempt was made to deduce 1) the internal norms of the interferer; 2) his short term aims; 3) his tactis and 4) his perception of the social environment. The analysis r
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Wallace, Anders. "Hacking ‘the Natural’: Seduction Skills, Self-Help, and the Ethics of Crafting Heterosexual Masculine Embodiment in ‘Seduction Communities’." Etyka 52 (December 1, 2016): 77–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.14394/etyka.491.

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Close relationships between men and women have been theorized from feminist, psychoanalytic, and political economic perspectives. In seduction communities, dating coaches and pickup artists act as expert mediums in scripting norms of heterosexual courtship between men and women. Based on an ethnographic analysis of intimate labor between coaches and male clients in seduction communities based in New York City, this article suggests three things. First, that apprenticing in techniques of heterosexual seduction is about masculine self-fashioning; second, that men experience culturally-based ambi
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Fallon, Katherine, and Casey Stockstill. "The Condensed Courtship Clock: How Elite Women Manage Self-development and Marriage Ideals." Socius: Sociological Research for a Dynamic World 4 (January 1, 2018): 237802311775348. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2378023117753485.

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As elite, heterosexual women delay marriage, complete higher education, and pursue high-status careers, are they able to de-center the other-oriented roles of wife and mother in their lives? Using in-depth interviews with 33 single, college-educated women, the authors examine how elite women balance expectations for self-development and family formation. Participants constructed a timeline with three phases: the self-development phase, the readiness moment, and the push to partner. Women’s initial focus on self-development ends with a shift toward feeling ready to search for a spouse. Classed
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Glayzer, Edward James, and Alex Joseph Nelson. "Paying for Gender (In)equality: The Individualization of Commodified Dating Rituals in South Korea." Anthropological Quarterly 97, no. 4 (2024): 735–65. https://doi.org/10.1353/anq.2024.a948154.

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ABSTRACT: In contemporary South Korea, the expectation that men should pay all, or the vast majority, of the costs of dating and courtship is shifting. Young women are increasingly achieving parity in educational achievement and employment with men, causing singles to see a more equal and individualized division of dating expenses align with their aspirations for an egalitarian and companionate romantic relationship. However, this seemingly equitable division belies the less obvious costs of dating, such as investments in cultivating body capital for women and men's often greater earning poten
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Baumeister, Roy F., and Kathleen D. Vohs. "Sexual Economics: Sex as Female Resource for Social Exchange in Heterosexual Interactions." Personality and Social Psychology Review 8, no. 4 (2004): 339–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15327957pspr0804_2.

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A heterosexual community can be analyzed as a marketplace in which men seek to acquire sex from women by offering other resources in exchange. Societies will therefore define gender roles as if women are sellers and men buyers of sex. Societies will endow female sexuality, but not male sexuality, with value (as in virginity, fidelity, chastity). The sexual activities of different couples are loosely interrelated by a marketplace, instead of being fully separate or private, and each couple's decisions may be influenced by market conditions. Economic principles suggest that the price of sex will
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Dr.A.Shaji, George. "Decoding the Language of Love: A Dictionary of Modern Dating Terms Used by Gen Z and Millennials." Partners Universal Innovative Research Publication (PUIRP) 02, no. 02 (2024): 119–34. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10967972.

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The advent of dating apps and online platforms for courtship in the 21st century has given rise to a unique lexicon for modern dating. Terms like “situationship,” “cushioning,” and “zombieing” reflect new dating dynamics and scenarios not experienced by previous generations. This paper analyzes survey data and trends surrounding seven common terms - situationships, cushioning, kittenfishing, zombieing, “date of view” experiences, “riz,” and stashing - used amongst Gen Z and Millennial daters. Situationships describe non-committed rela
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Susanto, Octavianus Budi, Swastiningsih Swastiningsih, Okol Sri Suharyo, and April Kukuh Susilo. "THE INFLUENCE OF KNOWLEDGE AND PERCEPTION LEVELS AND INTER-PERSONAL COMMUNICATION TOWARD VIOLENT BEHAVIOR IN TEENAGER RELATIONSHIP." International Journal of New Economics and Social Sciences 11, no. 1 (2020): 377–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0014.3555.

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This study aims to determine the effect of the level of knowledge and perceptions and inter-personal communication of adolescents on violent behavior in dating relation-ships. This research uses quantitative research methods with a population of adoles-cents aged 15 to 20 years in Petukanangan Kebayoran Lama, South Jakarta with a quota sample of 200 respondents. This study also uses theories and concepts related to adolescent perceptions, knowledge, interpersonal communication, and behavior. The results of this study found that there is an influence of knowledge variables, Interper-sonal Commu
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Books on the topic "Courtship norms"

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Wilde, Oscar. The importance of being earnest. Orchises, 1990.

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Wilde, Oscar. The importance of being earnest. Nelson ELT, 1994.

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Wilde, Oscar. The Importance of Being Earnest: And Other Plays. Pocket Books, 2005.

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Wilde, Oscar. The definitive four-act version of the importance of being earnest: A trivial comedy for serious people. Vanguard Press, 1987.

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Wilde, Oscar. The importance of being earnest: A trivial comedy for serious people. First Avenue Editions, 2014.

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Wilde, Oscar. The Importance of Being Earnest: A Trivial Comedy for Serious People. Wisehouse Classics, 2016.

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Andrade, Nathanael. Coming of Age. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190638818.003.0005.

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As a Palmyrene woman, Zenobia was expected to marry by members of her community. This chapter traces Zenobia’s life from childhood to maidenhood and then to marriage and maternity, which was considered the threshold of womanhood in Palmyra. A number of social factors affected her transition: her clothes, her hygiene, and her education. Zenobia wore tunics covered with a mantle or cloak, and at various stages of her life, she experimented with different styles of jewelry. As a young girl, her hair was uncovered; after marriage and childbirth, her hair was normally concealed from men outside her
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Lipsett-Rivera, Sonya, ed. A Cultural History of Love in the Age of Empire. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2025. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350119628.

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There was a significant transition in the 19th century not just in the way that emotions were understood but also in the way humans experienced the world: technology changed lifestyles and encouraged urbanization, breaking down old patterns of courtship, and science opened up the prospect of solutions for social (and individual) afflictions. With expanding literacy, men and women could express their feelings in their own love letters but these were couched within the prevailing ethos of the time: for some, a spiritual love that elevated rather than being debased by carnal passions. These chang
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Hardwick, Julie. Sex in an Old Regime City. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190945183.001.0001.

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Based on extensive archival research, the extraordinary stories of ordinary people’s lives in this book explore many facets of young people’s intimacy from meeting to courtship to the many occasions when untimely pregnancies necessitated a range of strategies. These might include marriage but could also be efforts to induce abortions, arrangements for out-of-wedlock delivery, charging the father with custody, leaving the baby with a foundling hospital, or infanticide. Clergy, lawyers, social welfare officials, employers, midwives, wet-nurses, neighbors, family, and friends supported young wome
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Wilde, Oscar. Importance of Being Earnest. Lulu Press, Inc., 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Courtship norms"

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Bennion, Janet. "Courtship, Marriage, and Sexuality." In Women of Principle. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195120707.003.0005.

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Abstract Most Allred women are able to use polygyny to their advantage. The following stories generally confirm that female converts are upwardly mobile in their progression to marry well and find a relatively comfortable home for themselves and their children. This chapter describes the socialization, courtship, and marriage rules and norms not already mentioned in chapter 2. It then provides several narratives of women’s experience in marriage that illustrate the broad range of experiences of both convert and established wives. Finally, drawing upon community demographic statistics on marriage and family, it shows how convert women and elite established men have advantages over convert males in the kingdom building process.
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Davies, Ceryl Teleri. "Gender norms and young intimate relationship roles." In Understanding Abuse in Young People's Intimate Relationships. Policy Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447362661.003.0004.

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Chapter 3 focuses on exploring the impact of gendered social norms of relationship roles, in particular, the power dynamics during each stage of the progression of young intimate relationships. The sense of the gendered social construction of intimate relationships will be explored, basically, the norm or cultural feature of courtship, discussing the perceived benefits and comfort gained from accepting established gendered scripts, rather than suffering the consequences of non-conformity. Young women lack the power to operationalise their egalitarian attitudes in order to engage in relationships that adhere to the description of what they expect, want or desire within a ‘healthy relationship’. They demonstrate how they carefully managed their ‘performance of self’ and the management of their own identity. It will be argued that barriers preventing the operationalisation of their attitudes, beliefs, wishes and feelings reinforce gender differences, providing unstable grounding for a change towards ‘real’ gender equality. Young women perform what they see as the expected girlfriend role to meet their boyfriends’ demands, to the detriment of their own self-development of identity.
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Hasday, Jill Elaine. "The Legal Protection of Ordinary Deception in Courtship, Sex, and Marriage." In Intimate Lies and the Law. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190905941.003.0007.

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This chapter explores the law’s commitment to preserving the existing norms and practices that shape courtship, sex, and marriage. Judges are much less likely to provide remedies for examples of intimate deception they believe are commonplace and more likely to give remedies in cases they think are deviant and unusual. When judges assume that many forms of deceit are typical in courtship, sex, and marriage, they help make that so—normalizing the deception by protecting it from legal disapproval and redress. This dedication to safeguarding ordinary deception in intimate relationships has also functioned to protect extraordinary deceit. Courts have sometimes denied remedies for admittedly egregious intimate deception out of concern that providing redress might create a slippery slope that would ultimately jeopardize more ordinary deceivers. Indeed, the judicial commitment to shielding commonplace intimate deception has even helped defendants who deceived business competitors or government officials.
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