Ressentiment in the Manosphere: Conceptions of Morality and Avenues for Resistance in the Incel Hatred Pipeline
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Moral Devaluation in the Manosphere
2.1. Incels and Victimhood Morality
“There are good people and there are bad people. The good people are incels, of which there are two main kinds: those who recognize that the world is hostile to them, but who are not yet reconciled to their sorry fate (the “redpilled”), and those who not merely recognize that the world is hostile to them, but who accept this and the inevitability of their sorry fate (the “blackpilled”). The latter form an elite-status group among incels: a sort of vanguard that proclaims to see the world as it is, without illusions or the distortions of wishful thinking. The bad people are women and sexually successful men: the “Stacys” and the “Chads”. The former are resented because they are desired yet unobtainable, while the latter are envied because they possess what the incels are sorely lacking (i.e., male sexual charisma and sexual partners). This combination of resentment and envy fuels an intense hatred of both “Stacys”, who are castigated as shallow and fundamentally untrustworthy, and “Chads”, who are derided as stupid and obnoxious.”
2.2. Ressentiment as the Emotional Mechanism of Moral Devaluation in Incel Black Pill Ideology
2.3. On the Outside, Looking in: Counter-Morality as Resistance to the “Hatred Pipeline”
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
5. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Incels, Red Pill, Black Pill, and the Manosphere
Appendix B
- Collecting data from public domains; understanding online discourse
Appendix C
- Coding Example (See Figure A1)
1 | The manosphere is a reactionary community of (predominantly white) men who adopt antifeminism and toxic masculinity, promoting narratives of men as innocent scapegoats or victims of a hostile society and women [6,7,8,9]. For terminology of manosphere groups and their ideology, see Appendix A. |
2 | For a critical theoretical discussion on classic and recent philosophical and social scientific theories of ressentiment, see Salmela and Capelos [1]. |
3 | Please see Appendix A for a discussion of “red pill” and “black pill” incel ideology. |
4 | While resentment as moral anger can emerge on its own or through ressentiment, it is important to observe differences in the intentional targets and action tendencies between these two types of resentment. The first type of resentment is moral anger at injustices and wrongs that motivates individual or collective action seeking to correct or retribute the relevant injustice or wrongdoing. This high-action readiness associates the first type of resentment with anger proper. The second type of resentment resulting from ressentiment is more complex as it is generated from repressed shame, envy, or humiliation, which are intolerable for the self. Therefore, resentment mediated by ressentiment has an indeterminate and “blurred” affective focus on generic “enemies” of the self [39] that allows its targeting to various scapegoats in political rhetoric [3]. For more detailed accounts on the differences between unmediated resentment and ressentiment-mediated resentment, see Capelos and colleagues [40], and Salmela and Szanto [41]. |
5 | Co-occurrence networks are a method used to analyse the relationships between words or linguistic units based on their patterns of co-occurrence within a corpus of text. In a co-occurrence network, words are represented as nodes, and the connections between them (edges) are determined by how often they occur together within a certain context. The first step in creating a co-occurrence network is selecting a corpus of text: for example, a collection of literary works or a database of social media posts. The researchers then define the context in which co-occurrences will be analyzed, for example a sentence, a paragraph, a document, or any other defined unit of text. Within this defined context, the researchers count how often each pair of words occurs together. Once co-occurrences are counted, a network is constructed where each unique word becomes a node. Edges between nodes represent co-occurrences between the corresponding words. The strength of the connection (weight) between nodes can be determined by the frequency of their co-occurrence. The analysis focuses on the structural properties of the network, such as central nodes that frequently co-occur with many other words, clusters or communities of closely related words, and overall patterns of word association. |
6 | Some posts only contained the title, with the content being a video or a link to an external website like Reddit. We refrained from coding video content, even when the linked site contained variables associated with ressentiment (such as a screenshot of an incel justifying blackpilling), as this would require a more detailed visual coding framework. |
7 | For a discussion on the logic of small samples in interview research, see Crouch and McKenzie [65]. |
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Capelos, T.; Salmela, M.; Talalakina, A.; Cotena, O. Ressentiment in the Manosphere: Conceptions of Morality and Avenues for Resistance in the Incel Hatred Pipeline. Philosophies 2024, 9, 36. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9020036
Capelos T, Salmela M, Talalakina A, Cotena O. Ressentiment in the Manosphere: Conceptions of Morality and Avenues for Resistance in the Incel Hatred Pipeline. Philosophies. 2024; 9(2):36. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9020036
Chicago/Turabian StyleCapelos, Tereza, Mikko Salmela, Anastaseia Talalakina, and Oliver Cotena. 2024. "Ressentiment in the Manosphere: Conceptions of Morality and Avenues for Resistance in the Incel Hatred Pipeline" Philosophies 9, no. 2: 36. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9020036
APA StyleCapelos, T., Salmela, M., Talalakina, A., & Cotena, O. (2024). Ressentiment in the Manosphere: Conceptions of Morality and Avenues for Resistance in the Incel Hatred Pipeline. Philosophies, 9(2), 36. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9020036