How “cheap sex” is changing our relationships and marriages

Sociologist Mark Regnerus’ new book examines how technology is transforming cultural attitudes towards sex and marriage.

In his new book, Cheap Sex: The Transformation of Men, Marriage and Monogamy (Oxford University Press), sociologist Mark Regnerus examines the impact the Pill, pornography, and online dating have had on marriage and relationships.

Regnerus, an associate professor at the University of Texas at Austin and a senior fellow at the Austin Institute for the Study of Family and Culture, received international attention several years ago for his New Family Structures Study. That study, published in 2012, demonstrated differences in outcomes between children with a parent who has same-sex relationships and those who are raised by their married, biological parents.

Regnerus recently spoke to Catholic World Report about his important new work.

Leslie Fain, for CWR: What prompted you to write Cheap Sex?

Mark Regnerus: Two things: first, a few key social psychologists and economists helped me see the problem at a “macro” level, and then second, I started tracking how the problem was manifesting itself at the personal level.

CWR: In your book, you describe “cheap sex” as a mentality that has been facilitated by the popularity of the Pill, mass-produced pornography, and online dating/meeting services. What is cheap sex, and how is it impacting relationships, sex, and marriage in the West?

Regnerus: Cheap sex is the reality that access to sexual experiences has gotten easier, or “cheaper,” over the past several decades. It has speeded up how quickly relationships become sexual, slowed down the progress of those relationships toward marriage, and made many men and women less certain about the person they’re with.

CWR: What is the exchange relationship, and why do you describe it as “deeply human”?

Regnerus: Men and women seek to be in relationship with each other, but they tend to value different things and exhibit different strengths, desires, and resources—hence the need for an exchange relationship in which each person gives the other something they lack in trade for something they are seeking. Sexual intercourse is an example of exchange. More often than men, women’s sexual interests, as I say in the book, “include the affirmation of desirability, expressing and receiving love, the validation of worth, and fostering or reinforcing relationship commitment. Men can appreciate each of those too, and plenty do, but they will tend to be secondary or tertiary reasons for sex.” The notion of exchange is not the only way to understand the matter, and sex is of course not reducible to transaction. But whether we wish to admit it or not, there is this aspect to it. Why is it deeply human? Because it’s as old as we are.

CWR: Why should married people be concerned about the cheap sex mentality?

Regnerus: Because marriage is not “cheap-sex proof.” Cheap sex is a reality now, and it’s no respecter of our deepest commitments.

CWR: Marriage and sexual relationships have undergone many changes since the 1960s. In your book, you write that the “institutional” model of marriage, which gave way to the “soulmate” model of marriage, has now developed into something completely distinct: the “Pure Relationship.” What is the “pure relationship,” and how does it differ from institutional marriage and soulmate marriage models (besides the fact a lot of these couples aren’t marrying)?

Regnerus: In romantic love—including the soul-mate model—there may be stops and starts, but as I say in the book, “the quest is for settled-ness, the destination is a family, and the assumption is distinctiveness (and magnetism) between men and women.” This sort of relationship seeks to solidly preserve the object of care and add to the world, to expand by giving itself away to the object of love. It’s vulnerable to our whims and wishes—which leads to no shortage of divorces—but it’s still couple-focused. The “pure” relationship, an idea identified by British social theorist Anthony Giddens 25 years ago, is far more contingent, individualist, and fragile. From the book: “equality is its organizing principle, taste and emotion are its barometers, discovery is a key goal, and while the couple is the basic structure to the union, it is never to usurp the individual’s primacy and will.” It’s a relationship form and mentality that is inherently less stable than even the soul-mate model.

CWR: How are LGBT relationships the vanguard of the “pure relationship”?

Regnerus: Giddens held that gay and lesbian relationships were “in the vanguard of the pure relationship form,” which meant that their relationships would most clearly exhibit the traits of this new form of relating, and I see evidence of it in the higher number of gay partners, the shorter duration of relationships, and their greater proclivity toward sexual technologies like pornography. Bisexuality in particular seems to be a symptom of this shift—a state in which everyone is a potential partner. Moreover, the elevation of sexual identity as an individual trait is itself symptomatic of the rise in the focus on the sexual self and the decline in focus on unions and relationships. But even though they may be the vanguard, gays and lesbians have not remained alone in that. The “pure” relationship mentality and its practices have colonized heterosexual relationships, including marriage.

CWR: Are you or other sociologists predicting what comes after the “pure relationship”? Can you envision a time when American sex and dating habits begin to mimic those in Japan, where many young people seem to have given up on relationships altogether?

Regnerus: That’s hard to say. Japan is a rather different culture, with unique traditional pressures that have combined with the same modern mating-market dynamics that young adults everywhere feel. The answer to your question may hinge on how dependent Americans become on new sexual technologies—like sex robots or artificial intelligence that “learns” and talks back to us. I don’t see any emerging legal concern about those things. Marriage could become a minority practice, for sure. But it won’t disappear altogether.

CWR: One of the most interesting chapters of the book to me is the one that dealt with pornography. Could you explain how pornography changes the attitudes and beliefs of those who view it regularly? You mentioned in the book an increased acceptance of gay marriage, as well as a deadening of religious impulses, in those who are regular consumers of porn.

Regnerus: We underestimate how capable modern pornography is of altering us and affecting everyone—even those who don’t give it a look. It fosters the “pure” relationship mentality that sex is about the individual, not the relationship. It was a gateway for many, especially men, to become more familiar with the idea of gay and lesbian relationships, and less likely to hold onto a vision of the sexual union as fundamentally about men, women, and marriage. So I assert in the book that, “contrary to what very many people might wish to think, men’s support for redefining marriage may not be the product of actively adopting ideals about expansive freedoms, rights, liberties, and a noble commitment to fairness. It may be, at least in part, a passive byproduct of regular exposure to the diversity of sex found in contemporary porn.” And I’m not the only scholar who sees the connection between porn and politics. It appears in other data, too. Meanwhile, pornography seems to deaden the religious sensibilities. It’s hardly surprising.

CWR: You describe organized religion as the key to supporting institutional marriage, but in the chapter on “Men, Marriage, and Monogamy,” you write that “clear cracks are beginning to show in the foundation.” Maybe I’m too much of a “glass-half-empty” type of person, but I was really surprised that among weekly church-goers: 14 percent are unsure about marriage being outdated; 23 percent are unsure about the wisdom of cohabitating before marriage; 21 percent don’t know what they think about no-strings-attached sex; 25 percent don’t know if viewing pornography is okay or not; 10 percent are unsure about whether extramarital sex might ever be permissible; 17 percent don’t know if consensual, polyamorous unions are okay.

These statistics represent evangelical and Catholic weekly church-goers, I believe. Can you give any advice on what Catholic clergy, catechists, and parents can do to shore up religious beliefs about marriage and sexuality?

Regnerus: It’s hard to believe that we have to keep saying it, but if you want your parish and its families to remain distinctively Catholic in both mind and practice, you simply must assume that the flock is very vulnerable to shifting well away from Catholic understanding of marriage and sexual union. Clergy, catechists, and parents tend to remember when they speak plainly about sex and relationships—since it’s difficult to do—but they’re not nearly as repetitive and “on message” as popular media is. Our attention is being sought, and won, by forces very unfriendly to Catholic perspectives on sexuality and marriage.

CWR: In the book you have eight predictions for 2030. I don’t want to give them all away, but you write that sex will continue to get even cheaper—in other words, the trends you highlight in this book will not only continue, but will increase, in many instances. One of the predictions you make that was the most unsettling to me was that porn will become “commonplace,” “the new normal,” by 2030. As a sociologist, do you see any reason for hope when states like Utah declare porn “a public health crisis,” or when celebrities like Pamela Anderson and Chris Rock are speaking out about pornography? Does anything you see make you feel at all hopeful?

Regnerus: About pornography, I’m not very hopeful. It lends itself to compulsivity. Liberals recognize it’s become a problem but don’t wish to appear prudish. Conservatives know it’s a problem, but are wed to free speech. Technology worms its way into every corner of our social lives, and demand for pornography remains high. If there is money to be made, the American capitalist sensibility has no loyalty to virtue.

I could be wrong. I hope I’m wrong. Porn on-demand has been removed from some hotel chains, and that’s an obvious victory. It is the start of something bigger? I don’t know. I have my doubts.

CWR: You write more than once that Cheap Sex is not a clarion call to return to a simpler time, partly because that isn’t going to happen. What can people who care about marriage and family—the parents, teachers, clergy, policy makers, etc.—do with the information you’ve provided in an effort to change things around?

Regnerus: The primary reason I wrote the book is to explain our situation, not to map the way out of it. I don’t have good advice about what can reverse this. However, I think the book enables us to better “see” the situation we’re in now, and knowledge can be extraordinarily helpful. We know there’s something wrong. We tend to blame ourselves, or men, or women, or to criticize “the culture” as having become decadent. But we didn’t get to this point without the technology—the Pill, porn, and online dating—that has made sex easier and hence “cheaper.” Understanding how it happened is a good first step toward helping people to navigate the relationship scene more prudently and chastely. Change can happen, but it starts with seeing the problems more clearly.


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About Leslie Fain 21 Articles
Leslie Fain is a freelance writer who lives in Louisiana with her husband and three sons. You can follow her on Twitter here.

6 Comments

    • Bishop Victor Emmanuel Fernandez, a papal favorite, most likely is heartbroken.
      When he recovers from his deep sorrow, “Tucho” will bestow on us all the wisdom he gleaned from the Playboy philosophy.
      “HMWYM, the Art of Kissing”. Can it get any creepier, dear pewsitters?

    • “Has the Vatican sent condolences on the passing of Hefner yet?”–Pat

      No, but the Church continues to urge the faithful to pray for all the departed–especially for those most in need of Christ’s mercy.

  1. Although I don’t disagree much with what you say, the cry from those who “toe the ecclesiastic line” may never be a happy cry. This article seems weighted in favor of no one using any contraceptive. Are all users of the pill damned to hell? Please explain “cheap sex”. I recently saw a talk show where human sexuality was being discussed. The wife had a complaint that in 30 years of marital bliss she never had an orgasm. That is clinical. Does the church care? I have trouble with current dogma where one size fits all. God created man, and yes woman, in his image and likeness. He gave us a conscience and made us unique.

  2. This segment is central for me: “It’s hard to believe that we have to keep saying it, but if you want your parish and its families to remain distinctively Catholic in both mind and practice, you simply must assume that the flock is very vulnerable to shifting well away from Catholic understanding of marriage and sexual union.”

    VERY true, since most of our couples and children spend more time DAILY on screens of some kind (strongly contaminated by the father of lies) than they do in a week in worship or faith formation (predominately child-focused). What is needed is a strategic plan to evangelize, catechize couples and parents – from their engagement to at least the confirmation of their first child – so as to counteract their secularized view of faith, sexuality and marriage. Not just to talk doctrine AT them but to facilitate growth in holiness, the deepest hunger of our hearts. It would be very difficult, though not impossible to do.
    I’ve frequently complained that our bishops seem more focused on defending marriage and church teaching (which is a woefully insufficient use of their energy) rather than coming up with an action plan, as they finally did after the clergy sexual abuse scandal. St. John Paul, in Familiaris consortio (1981., nos 65, 70-71) laid out an action framework for renewing the domestic church. If our pastoral leaders had heeded his directive, maybe we wouldn’t have needed another Synod on the family 35 years later. Mr. Regenerus has well documented the result of such inactivity.

  3. The modern western sense of ‘freedom’ has become absurd. You can have sex with anyone, anyway, anytime… as long as it feels good, is consensual.. as if 10 yr olds are capable of making that decision. There are no other factors! Could have fooled me… the world is saturated in sex. ISIS starves their young recruits.. We allow porno, murder,, etc. at the present moment the sky is the limit and our youth and older are biting at it.. they’re gobbling it up… drugs, suicide, sex, porno, depression.. just try to intervene!!! The philosopy of ‘self’ (indivualism) is killing us.. all professions have contributed big tim

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  3. TVESDAY CATHOLICA EDITION | Big Pulpit
  4. El sociólogo Mark Regnerus lo analiza en su libro «Cheap Sex» La mentalidad del sexo fácil daña al matrimonio porque «no respeta ni los compromisos más profundos» | CONAPFAM - Coordinadora Nacional Pro Familia
  5. La mentalidad del sexo fácil daña al matrimonio porque «no respeta ni los compromisos más profundos» | CONAPFAM - Coordinadora Nacional Pro Familia

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