Register      Login
Sexual Health Sexual Health Society
Publishing on sexual health from the widest perspective
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Sex, love and gender norms: sexual life and experience of a group of young people in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

Hoa Ngan Nguyen A and Pranee Liamputtong B C
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Centre for Gender and Family Studies, The Institute of Social Sciences, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.

B School of Public Health, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Victoria 3086, Australia.

C Corresponding author. Email: pranee@latrobe.edu.au

Sexual Health 4(1) 63-69 https://doi.org/10.1071/SH06023
Submitted: 30 March 2006  Accepted: 22 January 2007   Published: 26 February 2007

Abstract

This paper discusses the impacts of gender norms on the sexual life and experience of a group of young Vietnamese people. It is based on a qualitative study on sexuality and abortion among young people in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. There were two general attitudes towards premarital sex. One view supported young people in a serious, loving relationship engaging in sex before marriage; the other opposed premarital sex because it affected the reputation of girls and their families. These general attitudes were similar to the views on virginity: one group believed strongly in girls maintaining their virginity and the other group emphasised love, emotion and trust, not virginity, as the most important criteria for marriage. Among women there were more supporters than opponents of the traditional view of premarital sex and virginity. Premarital sex was more acceptable for young people in a serious, loving relationship with certain commitment to marriage. Young men considered sex a way to express their love and to become more intimate. Women’s view was that premarital sex only occurred within a serious, loving relationship or when there was a serious commitment to marriage. It is clear that young people’s sexual life is shaped and constrained by gender norms through political interventions, sexual education and moral judgements. Under the pressure of these norms, young people face many difficulties in order to fulfill a safe and satisfying sexual life.


Acknowledgements

We thank all the Vietnamese young people who took part in this study and were willing to share their private experiences with the researcher. Without their insights, this study would not have been possible. The first author thanks the Ford Foundation for sponsoring her study at La Trobe University and field trip to undertake her field work in Vietnam. We also thank Greg Murphy and Rosemary Oakes, who read and made comments on this paper for us.


References


[1] Zhang HX,  Locke C. Contextualising reproductive rights challenges: the Vietnam situation. Womens Stud Int Forum 2002; 25 443–53.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

[2] Khuat TH . Study on sexuality in Vietnam: the known and unknown issues. Regional Working Paper. Hanoi: The Population Council; 1998.

[3] Gammeltoft T . The irony of sexual agency: premarital sex in urban northern Vietnam. In: Werner J, Belanger D, editors. Gender, household, state: Doi moi in Vietnam. New York: Southeast Asia Program Publication; 2002. pp. 111–28.

[4] Nguyen QL,  Pham KC. Quan he gioi tinh-tinh duc doi voi lop tre: Noi lo cua gia dinh va xa hoi. Tap chi Khoa Hoc ve Phu Nu, so 4 (22), 21–23. (Youth’s sexual relation: the worry for families and our society. J Women’s Studies 1995; 4 21–3.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

[5] Marr DG . Vietnamese youth in the 1990s. Working paper #3. Sydney: Macquarie University; 1996.

[6] Werner J , Belanger D . Introduction: gender and Vietnam studies. In: Werner J, Belanger D, editors. Gender, household, state: Doi Moi in Vietnam. New York: Southeast Asia Program Publication; 2002. pp. 13–28.

[7] Colebrook C . Gender. New York: Palgrave Macmillan; 2004.

[8] Connell RW . Gender. Cambridge: Polity Press; 2002.

[9] Frenier MD , Mancini K . Vietnamese women in a Confucian setting: the causes of the initial decline in the status of east Asian women. In: Barry K, editor. Vietnam’s women in transition. London: Macmillan Press; 1996. pp. 21–37.

[10] Mackerras C . Women in contemporary Vietnam. In: Mackerras C, Cribb R, Healy A, editors. Contemporary Vietnam: perspective from Australia. North Wollongong: University of Wollongong Press; 1988. pp. 89–104.

[11] Le TQ . Domestic violence in Vietnam and efforts to curb it. In: Barry K, editor. Vietnam’s women in transition. London: Macmillan Press Ltd; 1996. pp. 263–74.

[12] Tran TQ . Gender issues in Vietnam’s development. In: Nørlund I, Gates CL, Vu CD, editors. Vietnam in a changing world. Surrey: Curzon Press; 1996. pp. 187–206.

[13] Weeks J . Sexuality. London: Ellis Horwood Limited & Tavistock Publications; 1986.

[14] Goodstein L . Sexual assault in the United States and Vietnam: some thoughts and questions. In: Barry K, editor. Vietnam’s women in transition. London: Macmillan Press; 1996. pp. 275–86.

[15] Pham VB . The Vietnamese family in change: the case of the Red River Delta. Surrey: Curzon; 1999.

[16] Ho Chi Minh City Statistical Office. Statistical yearbook of Ho Chi Minh City. Ho Chi Minh City: City Statistical Office, 1996.

[17] Nguyen NH. Private matter, public concern: Sexuality and abortion among young people in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Unpublished Master of Public Health thesis, School of Public Health, La Trobe University, Melbourne; 2003.

[18] Gubrium JF , Holstein JA . Postmodern interviewing. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; 2003.

[19] Patton MQ . Qualitative research and evaluation methods, 3rd edn. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications; 2001.

[20] Liamputtong P , Ezzy D . Qualitative research methods, 2nd edn. Melbourne: Oxford University Press; 2005.

[21] Greig F . Babies, bond and boundaries: a study of maternity among Vietnamese–Australian women in Melbourne. MSc Thesis, University of Melbourne, Australia; 2003.

[22] Liamputtong P,  Naksook C. Life as mother in a new land: the experience of motherhood among Thai women in Australia. Health Care Women Int 2003; 24 650–68.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | PubMed |

[23] McMahan M . Engendering motherhood: identity and self-transformation in women’s lives. New York: Civil Ford Press; 1995.

[24] Engels F . The origin of the family, private property and the state. New York: International Publishers; 1972.

[25] Gammeltoft T. Seeking trust and transcendence: sexual risk taking among Vietnamese youth. Soc Sci Med 2002; 55 483–95.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | PubMed |

[26] Gammeltoft T Women’s bodies, women’s worries. Surrey: Curson Press; 1999.

[27] Khuat TH , Nguyen TNN , Belanger D . Intervention research on abortion and emergency contraception with unmarried youth in Ho Chi Minh City. Hanoi: Population Council; 2000.




* ‘Trial marriage’ is a term to describe a way of life occurring among students in dormitory or renting houses, in which a couple live together for a while then separate if they think they are not suitable for each other (p. 12).27