The intimate and sexual costs of emotional labor: the development of the women’s sexual emotional labor assessment
The intimate and sexual costs of emotional labor: the development of the women’s sexual emotional labor assessment
Emotional labor, the act of suppressing or altering one’s feelings to enhance another person’s well-being, is predominantly performed by women, especially within intimate relationships. Despite its impact on well-being, research on its role in sexuality remains limited. We developed the Women’s Sexual Emotional Labor Assessment (WOSELA), a 12-item scale based on themes identified by past qualitative studies. To ensure its reliability and validity, we conducted three studies with women partnered with men, as well as heterosexual single women from the UK and the USA (N = 831). Drawing on exploratory factor analysis in Study 1, four subscales were identified: faking orgasm, performing desire, tolerating discomfort or pain, and partner-referenced sexual satisfaction. Confirmatory factor analyses in Study 2 (pre-registered) provided support for the WOSELA in its current form. In Study 3 (pre-registered), we demonstrated the validity of the WOSELA by establishing significant negative correlations with sexual agency, sexual communication, and sexual pleasure. Our results further show that the WOSELA was not significantly related to positive-partner-oriented sexual responsiveness. The WOSELA offers a unique tool to explore the role of emotional labor in sustaining the pleasure gap, as well as in broader power dynamics within intimate relationships and its impact on women’s well-being.
117-138
Oschatz, Tanja
28a2ca40-3ce8-43e5-b711-47344412a271
Piemonte, Jennifer L.
1a24f701-285e-4aac-9b08-cdfad39fabb3
Klein, Verena
ae0b3b07-e55d-4793-bdc0-ceea23f00b9e
19 December 2024
Oschatz, Tanja
28a2ca40-3ce8-43e5-b711-47344412a271
Piemonte, Jennifer L.
1a24f701-285e-4aac-9b08-cdfad39fabb3
Klein, Verena
ae0b3b07-e55d-4793-bdc0-ceea23f00b9e
Oschatz, Tanja, Piemonte, Jennifer L. and Klein, Verena
(2024)
The intimate and sexual costs of emotional labor: the development of the women’s sexual emotional labor assessment.
Archives of Sexual Behavior, 54, .
(doi:10.1007/s10508-024-03061-7).
Abstract
Emotional labor, the act of suppressing or altering one’s feelings to enhance another person’s well-being, is predominantly performed by women, especially within intimate relationships. Despite its impact on well-being, research on its role in sexuality remains limited. We developed the Women’s Sexual Emotional Labor Assessment (WOSELA), a 12-item scale based on themes identified by past qualitative studies. To ensure its reliability and validity, we conducted three studies with women partnered with men, as well as heterosexual single women from the UK and the USA (N = 831). Drawing on exploratory factor analysis in Study 1, four subscales were identified: faking orgasm, performing desire, tolerating discomfort or pain, and partner-referenced sexual satisfaction. Confirmatory factor analyses in Study 2 (pre-registered) provided support for the WOSELA in its current form. In Study 3 (pre-registered), we demonstrated the validity of the WOSELA by establishing significant negative correlations with sexual agency, sexual communication, and sexual pleasure. Our results further show that the WOSELA was not significantly related to positive-partner-oriented sexual responsiveness. The WOSELA offers a unique tool to explore the role of emotional labor in sustaining the pleasure gap, as well as in broader power dynamics within intimate relationships and its impact on women’s well-being.
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s10508-024-03061-7
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 November 2024
Published date: 19 December 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 502094
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502094
ISSN: 0004-0002
PURE UUID: 28be11d4-be6c-4e95-843f-8c4cbbc31c26
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Date deposited: 16 Jun 2025 16:52
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:37
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Author:
Tanja Oschatz
Author:
Jennifer L. Piemonte
Author:
Verena Klein
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