View the Table of Contents
Read the Introduction
Read the Gawker Review
Listen to her NPR Interview
The Sociology of "Hooking Up": Author Interview on Inside Higher
Ed
Newsweek: Campus Sexperts
Watch Bogle's interview on CBS
Hookup culture creates unfamiliar environment - to parents, at
least
Hooking Up: What Educators Need to Know - An op-ed on CHE by the
author
"Bogle is a smart interviewer and gets her subjects to reveal
intimate and often embarrassing details without being moralizing.
This evenhanded, sympathetic book on a topic that has received far
too much sensational and shoddy coverage is an important addition
to the contemporary literature on youth and sexuality."
--"Publishers Weekly"
"A page turner! This book should be required reading for college
students and their parents! Bogle doesn't condemn hooking up, but
she does explain it. This knowledge could help a lot of young
people make better choices and get insight into their own behavior
whether or not they choose to hook up."
--Pepper Schwartz, author of "Everything You Know about Sex and
Love is Wrong"
"In her ambitious sociological study, Kathleen Bogle, an
assistant professor of sociology and criminal justice at La Salle
University, offers valuable insight on the hook-up craze sweeping
college campuses and examines the demise of traditional dating, how
campus life promotes casual sex, its impact on post-college
relationships, and more. Donat let your college freshman leave home
without it."
--"Main Line Today"
aHooking Up uses interviews with both women and men to
understand why dating has declined in favor of a new script for
sexual relationships on college campuses. . . . Boglepresents a
balanced analysis that explores the full range of hooking-up
experiences.a
--Joel Best, author of "Flavor of the Month: Why Smart People Fall
for Fads"
It happens every weekend: In a haze of hormones and alcohol,
groups of male and female college students meet at a frat party, a
bar, or hanging out in a dorm room, and then hook up for an evening
of sex first, questions later. As casually as the sexual encounter
begins, so it often ends with no strings attached; after all, it
was ajust a hook up.a While a hook up might mean anything from
kissing to oral sex to going all the way, the lack of commitment is
paramount.
Hooking Up is an intimate look at how and why college students
get together, what hooking up means to them, and why it has
replaced dating on college campuses. In surprisingly frank
interviews, students reveal the circumstances that have led to the
rise of the booty call and the death of dinner-and-a-movie. Whether
it is an expression of postfeminist independence or a form of
youthful rebellion, hooking up has become the only game in town on
many campuses.
In Hooking Up, Kathleen A. Bogle argues that college life itself
promotes casual relationships among students on campus. The book
sheds light on everything from the differences in what young men
and women want from a hook up to why freshmen girls are more likely
to hook up than their upper-class sisters and the effects this
period has on the sexual and romantic relationships of both men and
women after college. Importantly, she shows us that the standards
for young men and women are not as different as they used to be, as
women talk about afriends with benefitsa and aone and donea hook
ups.
Breakingthrough many misconceptions about casual sex on college
campuses, Hooking Up is the first book to understand the new sexual
culture on its own terms, with vivid real-life stories of young men
and women as they navigate the newest sexual revolution.
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