Sex Is Pseudo-controvertial
Published October 05, 2002
Sex columns are popping up in school papers at colleges all over the nation. Ooh, risque. Actually not: in this time of great political and policy turmoil, what could be less controvertial than sex, the great equalizer and of interest to all?
- It wasn't Natalie Krinsky's idea. But the editors at The Yale Daily News were sure she would be a natural: She was a good writer. She was funny. But most of all, she was not easily embarrassed.
Now, a year later, Ms. Krinsky, a 20-year-old junior, is a campus celebrity, writing the most talked about column in The News. She does not opine about the burning issues of the day: the university's labor negotiations or the possible war in Iraq.
Ms. Krinsky's subject is sex.
"Girls fake all the time," she wrote in one column. "But why? Convincing everyone in the room that you're wearing a diamond when in reality it's a cubic zirconia IS fun, but it still doesn't beat a good, hard, quality rock."
In her sassy "Sex and the City"-inspired voice, Ms. Krinsky talks about everything from the Yale man's fear of commitment ("I have been here for two glorious years and I am still waiting for love, actually, scratch that, ANYONE who is interested in commitment to knock on my door") to the finer points of oral sex, the details of which will not be printed here, but prompted more than 200,000 hits on the Yale paper's Web site last year.
Ms. Krinsky is one of a growing number of sex columnists at college papers across the country who are reflecting a striking openness among many undergraduates when it comes to the discussion of sex. The columns include "Sexpert Tells All" in New York University's Washington Square News, The Daily Californian's "Sex on Tuesdays" at the University of California at Berkeley and Meghan Bainum's odes to experimentation and safe sex in The Daily Kansan at the University of Kansas. Subjects range from sexual arousal to oral sex etiquette to bondage.
"If you've been missing a spark in your sex life," Ms. Bainum, a 21-year-old senior in Lawrence, Kan., wrote in a recent column, "adding a good pair of handcuffs or a spanking or two to your normal routine could be the way for you to put the sprinkles on your ice cream cone." As always, Ms. Bainum made a point of adding that this sort of sex is only for willing partners and should never involve pain.
- But all this talk about sex does not necessarily mean that a majority of college students are more sexually experienced than past generations.
- Sex Is Pseudo-controvertial
- Published: October 05, 2002
- Type:
- Section: Culture
- Writer: Eric Olsen
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