BarkerM (2013) Consent is a grey area? A comparison of understandings of consent in Fifty Shades of Grey and on the BDSM blogosphere. Sexualities16(8): 896–914.
2.
BeresMA (2007) ‘Spontaneous’ sexual consent: An analysis of sexual consent literature. Feminism & Psychology17(1): 93–108.
3.
BeresMAHeroldEMaitlandSB (2004) Sexual consent behaviors in same-sex relationships. Archives of Sexual Behavior33(5): 475–486.
4.
BeresMASennCYMcCawJ (2013) Navigating ambivalence: How heterosexual young adults make sense of desire differences. The Journal of Sex Research51(7): 765–776.
5.
FrithH (2015) Orgasmic Bodies: The Orgasm in Contemporary Western Culture, London: Palgrave Macmillan.
6.
FrithHKitzingerC (1997) Talk about sexual miscommunication. Women's Studies International Forum20(4): 517–528.
7.
HickmanSEMuehlenhardCL (1999) ‘By the semi-mystical appearance of a condom’: How young women and men communicate sexual consent in heterosexual situations. Journal of Sex Research36(3): 258–272.
KitzingerCFrithH (1999) Just say no? The use of conversation analysis in developing a feminist perspective on sexual refusal. Discourse & Society10(3): 293–316.
10.
LambS (2010) Feminist ideals for a healthy female adolescent sexuality: A critique. Sex Roles62(5–6): 294–306.
11.
LambSPetersonZD (2012) Adolescent girls’ sexual empowerment: Two feminists explore the concept. Sex Roles66(11–12): 703–712.
O’ByrneRRapleyMHansenS (2006) ‘You couldn't say ‘no’, could you?’ Young men’s understandings of sexual refusal. Feminism & Psychology16(2): 133–154.
14.
PetersonZD (2010) What is sexual empowerment? A multidimensional and process-oriented approach to adolescent girls’ sexual empowerment. Sex Roles62(5–6): 307–313.
15.
PetersonZDMuehlenhardCL (2007) Conceptualizing the ‘wantedness’ of women’s consensual and nonconsensual sexual experiences: Implications for how women label their experiences with rape. Journal of Sex Research44(1): 72–88.
16.
RobertsCKippaxSet al. (1995) Faking it: The story of ‘Ohh!’. Women’s Studies International Forum18(5/6): 523–532.
17.
StrgarW (2010) Love that Works: A Guide to Enduring Intimacy, Eugene, OR: Love Words Press.
18.
Thomas EJ, Stelzl M and Lafrance MN (2016) Faking to finish: Women’s accounts of feigning sexual pleasure to end unwanted sex. Sexualities. Epub ahead of print 19 July 2016. DOI: 10.1177/1363460716649338.
19.
Williams DJ, Thomas JN, et al. (2014) From ‘SSC’ and ‘RACK’ to the ‘4Cs’: Introducing a new framework for negotiating BDSM participation. Electronic Journal of Human Sexuality 17. Available at: http://mail.ejhs.org/volume17/BDSM.html (accessed 28 November 2016).