Oppression or empowerment for women? The lived experiences of women in consensual non-monogamous relationships with men
Summary
Views on consensual non-monogamy (CNM) differ in the Netherlands and other parts of the
western world, particularly regarding how women who are in CNM relationships with men
experience these relationships. Highly positive discourses pose CNM as a progressive
alternative to monogamy and as empowering for women. Simultaneously, some believe that
women who are in such relationships with men are being used by these men, and that these
relationship configurations are inherently oppressive towards women. In light of these varying
discourses, this thesis is focused on investigating the lived experiences of women who are in
CNM relationships with men, and on what their experiences can teach us about the possible
emancipatory effects of CNM for women. I conducted interviews with four women, which
revealed that these participants consider CNM to be empowering for them as women,
particularly because of the sexual freedom they experience and because they feel space to form
their relationships according to their own needs as well. Simultaneously, the interviews
indicated that some CNM relationships might involve patriarchal elements, which challenges
the notion of CNM as inherently involving gender equality. In addition, the interviews shed
light on how people in the interviewees’ respective environments respond to their non
monogamous relationships and the fact that they are women who engage in CNM.