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« Meet Drew Gilpin Faust, Harvard's New President | Main | Happy Valentine's Day » February 14, 2007Pledging Virginity ... to Your Father?Jennifer Baumgardner's story in the February issue of Glamour magazine explains what's behind "purity balls," where men exchange rings and vows -- with their daughters. If it sounds a little creepy, well, it is. Just consider the title: "Would you pledge your virginity to your father?" Welcome to Colorado Springs' Seventh Annual Father-Daughter Purity Ball, held at the five-star Broadmoor Hotel. The event’s purpose is, in part, to celebrate dad-daughter bonding, but the main agenda is for fathers to vow to protect the girls’ chastity until they marry and for the daughters to promise to stay pure. Pastor Randy Wilson, host of the event and cofounder of the ball, strides to the front of the room, takes the microphone and asks the men, "Are you ready to war for your daughters' purity?" Baumgardner does a good job of describing how protecting girls' virginity has become "a national, not just familial, concern" and covering the commercial and social culture that has built up around the abstinence only movement. She also discusses the importance of fathers playing a role in their daughters lives and treats everyone she interviews with great respect. "Encouraging girls to avoid sleeping around is, without a doubt, a good thing," writes Baumgardner. "The same goes for dad-daughter bonding; research shows that girls who have solid relationships with their fathers are more likely to grow up to be confident, self-respecting, successful women and to make wise choices along the way. Question is, is putting girls' purity on a pedestal the way to achieve these all-important goals?" The answer, both from a public policy standpoint as well as from a feminist perspective, is a clear "No." Teen pregnancy rates are on the decline, and experts credit most of the progress to improved contraceptive use, not virginity pledges. And then there's that pesky patriarchy to deal with. "In patriarchy, a father owns a girl’s sexuality," psychologist and feminist author Carol Gilligan tells Glamour. "And like any other property, he guards it, protects it, even loves it." Or, as Eve Ensler puts it: “When you sign a pledge to your father to preserve your virginity, your sexuality is basically being taken away from you until you sign yet another contract, a marital one. It makes you feel like you’re the least important person in the whole equation. It makes you feel invisible." Some of the girls interviewed aren't even clear about what the purity pledge means. But they do enjoy getting all dressed up for a special night. |
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