
• Z世代对“一夜情”的态度,与20年前的千禧一代截然不同,他们不太可能有一夜情,并且对婚姻的态度更加开放。他们在疫情期间萌生了浪漫理想主义的观念。
年轻人以混乱的“模糊关系”、“隐秘关系”和开放的约会态度闻名,但他们在感情方面可能比老一辈更认真。
《时代》杂志与舆观调查公司YouGov合作对1,000多名年轻人进行的调查显示,约62%的Z世代受访者表示,自己和朋友通常不会发生一夜情。只有约23%的人表示有过随意约会经历,这与《时代》杂志2004年从年轻千禧一代获得的反馈形成鲜明对比。当时约19%的年轻人表示不会发生一夜情,78%的人坦言第一次约会就会发生关系。
与人们对年轻人的刻板印象不同,Z世代在亲密关系中反而更为保守。这也体现在他们对待感情的认真态度上。《时代》杂志调查发现,只有21%的Z世代受访者认同"婚姻无关紧要"的观点,而在20年前,持有相同观点的千禧一代比例高达39%,这表明当代年轻人对婚姻的接受度正在提升。
多方面的影响使当代年轻人比前辈更认真地对待感情。最显著的是,新冠疫情迫使许多Z世代长期居家隔离,他们错过了关键的成长经历,这阻碍了他们的社交成长。而在“罗诉韦德案”被推翻后,越来越多人开始重新审视亲密关系甚至性行为本身的意义。关于婚姻,Z世代更倾向于在更年轻时寻找灵魂伴侣,同时对离婚持更开放态度。
Z世代媒体平台Screenshot的25岁编辑查理·索耶对《时代》杂志表示:“我们注重自爱,以各种可能的方式了解自己。社会给我们贴上自私的标签,这种评价可能也适用于感情观——我们不必总是遵循社会认定的常规路径。”
Z世代鄙视随意性关系,并注重寻找人生伴侣
Z世代不仅比千禧一代更少进行一夜情,他们的性行为总体上也有所减少。
美国疾病预防控制中心(Center for Disease Control and Prevention,CDC)的调查显示,2021年,约30%的青少年表示曾有过性行为。远低于2019年的38%,最大的原因就是疫情。Z世代在关键的性探索时期经历了封锁,这导致他们必要的社交成长受阻,进而影响了未来亲密关系的建立。但早在强制封控和配戴口罩政策出台之前,这一比例就已经开始下降;三十年前,超过一半青少年表示有过性行为。
Z世代的婚姻观也发生了变化,这主要是因为前辈们的遭遇给他们带来的启示。与千禧一代一样,Z世代成长在高离婚率的环境下。许多人可能见证了父母婚姻破裂,这改变了他们对婚姻的看法和结婚的意愿。美国家庭与婚姻研究中心(Center for Family and Marriage Research)2023年的一项研究显示,过去五十年,美国的结婚率下降了约60%。
千禧一代对夫妻长相厮守的可能性持怀疑态度。但Z世代对婚姻的态度更偏重于理想主义,许多人表示他们希望找到灵魂伴侣——根据Her Campus Media在2024年的调查,超过40%的Z世代处于认真的恋爱关系,27%的人正在寻找“对的人”。而且有93%的人表示他们对结婚的想法感兴趣。
这种现象可能有几种解释:一方面,由于天真的个性和疫情期间的社交隔离,Z世代可能更迷恋爱情。心理学家劳伦·纳波利塔诺对《新闻周刊》表示:“他们目前的婚姻观,可能是因为他们比较年轻。”
另一方面,传统的婚姻观念和婚姻的角色已经发生了变化。女性和男性的严格定义被颠覆,更多年轻人期待在家庭职责和养家方面建立平等的伴侣关系。人们因为真爱而不是因为经济前景而结婚,有望解决由来已久的婚姻问题。
Her Campus Media的联合创始人兼首席执行官斯蒂法妮·卡普兰·刘易斯对《新闻周刊》表示:“老一辈可能因为必要性或基于社会压力才选择结婚,这也导致离婚率较高,但Z世代对婚姻有不同的看法。他们认为,对伴侣做出承诺和拥有一个内部支持系统,能给人带来新的希望。”(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
• Z世代对“一夜情”的态度,与20年前的千禧一代截然不同,他们不太可能有一夜情,并且对婚姻的态度更加开放。他们在疫情期间萌生了浪漫理想主义的观念。
年轻人以混乱的“模糊关系”、“隐秘关系”和开放的约会态度闻名,但他们在感情方面可能比老一辈更认真。
《时代》杂志与舆观调查公司YouGov合作对1,000多名年轻人进行的调查显示,约62%的Z世代受访者表示,自己和朋友通常不会发生一夜情。只有约23%的人表示有过随意约会经历,这与《时代》杂志2004年从年轻千禧一代获得的反馈形成鲜明对比。当时约19%的年轻人表示不会发生一夜情,78%的人坦言第一次约会就会发生关系。
与人们对年轻人的刻板印象不同,Z世代在亲密关系中反而更为保守。这也体现在他们对待感情的认真态度上。《时代》杂志调查发现,只有21%的Z世代受访者认同"婚姻无关紧要"的观点,而在20年前,持有相同观点的千禧一代比例高达39%,这表明当代年轻人对婚姻的接受度正在提升。
多方面的影响使当代年轻人比前辈更认真地对待感情。最显著的是,新冠疫情迫使许多Z世代长期居家隔离,他们错过了关键的成长经历,这阻碍了他们的社交成长。而在“罗诉韦德案”被推翻后,越来越多人开始重新审视亲密关系甚至性行为本身的意义。关于婚姻,Z世代更倾向于在更年轻时寻找灵魂伴侣,同时对离婚持更开放态度。
Z世代媒体平台Screenshot的25岁编辑查理·索耶对《时代》杂志表示:“我们注重自爱,以各种可能的方式了解自己。社会给我们贴上自私的标签,这种评价可能也适用于感情观——我们不必总是遵循社会认定的常规路径。”
Z世代鄙视随意性关系,并注重寻找人生伴侣
Z世代不仅比千禧一代更少进行一夜情,他们的性行为总体上也有所减少。
美国疾病预防控制中心(Center for Disease Control and Prevention,CDC)的调查显示,2021年,约30%的青少年表示曾有过性行为。远低于2019年的38%,最大的原因就是疫情。Z世代在关键的性探索时期经历了封锁,这导致他们必要的社交成长受阻,进而影响了未来亲密关系的建立。但早在强制封控和配戴口罩政策出台之前,这一比例就已经开始下降;三十年前,超过一半青少年表示有过性行为。
Z世代的婚姻观也发生了变化,这主要是因为前辈们的遭遇给他们带来的启示。与千禧一代一样,Z世代成长在高离婚率的环境下。许多人可能见证了父母婚姻破裂,这改变了他们对婚姻的看法和结婚的意愿。美国家庭与婚姻研究中心(Center for Family and Marriage Research)2023年的一项研究显示,过去五十年,美国的结婚率下降了约60%。
千禧一代对夫妻长相厮守的可能性持怀疑态度。但Z世代对婚姻的态度更偏重于理想主义,许多人表示他们希望找到灵魂伴侣——根据Her Campus Media在2024年的调查,超过40%的Z世代处于认真的恋爱关系,27%的人正在寻找“对的人”。而且有93%的人表示他们对结婚的想法感兴趣。
这种现象可能有几种解释:一方面,由于天真的个性和疫情期间的社交隔离,Z世代可能更迷恋爱情。心理学家劳伦·纳波利塔诺对《新闻周刊》表示:“他们目前的婚姻观,可能是因为他们比较年轻。”
另一方面,传统的婚姻观念和婚姻的角色已经发生了变化。女性和男性的严格定义被颠覆,更多年轻人期待在家庭职责和养家方面建立平等的伴侣关系。人们因为真爱而不是因为经济前景而结婚,有望解决由来已久的婚姻问题。
Her Campus Media的联合创始人兼首席执行官斯蒂法妮·卡普兰·刘易斯对《新闻周刊》表示:“老一辈可能因为必要性或基于社会压力才选择结婚,这也导致离婚率较高,但Z世代对婚姻有不同的看法。他们认为,对伴侣做出承诺和拥有一个内部支持系统,能给人带来新的希望。”(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
• Gen Zers are far less likely to have one-night-stands than millennials 20 years ago, and they’re much more open to the idea of marriage. Their romantic idealism took root during the pandemic.
Young people are famous for their messy “situationships,” “sneaky links,” and open-minded attitudes about dating. But they may be taking relationships more seriously than older generations.
About 62% of Gen Z said they, and their friends, do not commonly have one-night stands, according to research from the Times, which polled more than 1,000 young people in partnership with YouGov. Only about 23% say they have casually hooked up, which is markedly different from responses the Times got from young millennials in 2004. Back then, about 19% of young people said they don’t have one-night stands, and 78% said they did partake in sex on a first date.
Defying stereotypes of young people, Gen Zers tend to be a bit more conservative in the bedroom. And in the same vein, they’re taking relationships more seriously. The Times found that 21% of the young generation agrees with the notion that marriage is irrelevant. Compared to 20 years ago, when 39% of millennials said the same thing, there seems to be a growing acceptance toward tying the knot.
There are several factors driving young people today to take relationships more seriously than the generation before them. Most notably, the COVID-19 pandemic forced many Gen Z to be stuck at home, missing out on these critical life experiences and stunting social growth. And in a post–Roe v. Wade world, more are reconsidering their intimate lives and even the concept of sex altogether. When it comes to marriage, Gen Z are thinking about finding soulmates at an earlier age, and are more comfortable with the idea of divorce.
“We are about self-love and learning about ourselves in whatever way possible,” Charlie Sawyer, a 25-year-old editor at Gen Z media publication Screenshot, told the Times. “We are labeled by society as quite selfish and that’s probably the same with relationships, we don’t always need to be doing things that society deems to be the normal path.”
Gen Z is ditching casual sex and turning to life partnership
Gen Z isn’t only having fewer one-night stands than their millennial counterparts—they’re having less sex altogether.
About 30% of teens in 2021 said that they had ever had sex, a significant drop from 38% in 2019, according to a survey from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The biggest factor in this plunge was the pandemic—Gen Z experienced lockdown during a critical time of sexual exploration, which stunted social growth needed to make those intimate connections down the line. But this rate was declining far before mandates and masking; three decades ago, more than half of teenagers reported having sex.
Gen Z’s perspective of marriage has changed, too—and it’s largely thanks to watching the generations before them. These young adults, much like millennials, were raised in environments with high divorce rates. Many likely experienced their parents splitting, which altered their views and willingness to marry. Over the past five decades marriage rates have plunged by about 60%, according to a 2023 study from the Center for Family and Marriage Research.
Millennials were cynical about their odds for success in a long-term marriage. But Gen Z has adopted a more idealistic attitude, with many saying they want to find their soulmates—more than 40% are in serious relationships, and 27% are looking for “the one,” according to 2024 findings from Her Campus Media. And overwhelmingly, 93% said they were interested in the idea of marriage.
There are a few possible explanations: One is that Gen Zers might be more enamored with the idea of love, due to their naivety and social isolation during the pandemic. “It’s possible that their current marriage beliefs are reflective of their young age,” Lauren Napolitano, a psychologist, told Newsweek.
Another is that traditional ideas of and roles in marriages have changed. Rigid constructs of femininity and masculinity have been turned on their head, and more young people are expecting equal partnership in terms of household duties and breadwinning. By marrying for genuine love and not economic prospect, there’s hope that historical marital troubles will be squashed.
“Older generations may have felt drawn to marriage out of necessity or obligated based on societal pressures which also led to high divorce rates, but Gen Z sees things differently,” Stephanie Kaplan Lewis, cofounder and CEO of Her Campus Media, told Newsweek. “For them, there is renewed hope in committing to a partner and having a built-in support system.”