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Incels, in-groups, and ideologies: The representation of gendered social actors in a sexuality-based online community

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Incels, in-groups, and ideologies: The representation of gendered social actors in a sexuality-based online community. / Heritage, Frazer; Koller, Veronika.
In: Journal of Language and Sexuality, Vol. 9, No. 2, 30.09.2020, p. 152-178.

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Heritage F, Koller V. Incels, in-groups, and ideologies: The representation of gendered social actors in a sexuality-based online community. Journal of Language and Sexuality. 2020 Sept 30;9(2):152-178. Epub 2020 Sept 7. doi: 10.1075/jls.19014.her

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@article{20a3ec570eca4ca9b17bc1efc9416078,
title = "Incels, in-groups, and ideologies: The representation of gendered social actors in a sexuality-based online community",
abstract = "We present a study of the online forum Reddit, specifically a sub-forum for (typically heterosexual) men who identify as involuntary celibates or {\textquoteleft}incels{\textquoteright}. Incels are an online imagined community/community of practice who wish to, but do not, have sexual relations with women. Owing to this identity, they view themselves as non-normative within broader society and see women and societal standards of masculinity as the cause of their problems. In this paper, we take a small corpus of 67,000 words generated from 50 threads created, and commented on, by incels. We analyse keywords, word frequencies, and concordance lines to explore the representation of gendered social actors. Keyword analysis reveals that references to gendered social actors are particularly salient within this community, leading to an analysis of all such social actors in the corpus. The findings suggest that incels position different groups of men in a hierarchy in which conventionally attractive men occupy the top position. Notably, we find that female social actors are not placed in a similar hierarchy. An additional appraisal analysis of the most frequently occurring male and female social actors shows that men are judged as incapacitated while women are seen as immoral, dishonest and capable of hurting men. Members of the online community also seem preoccupied with physical attractiveness.The study opens up a number of avenues for future research, especially into the complexities with which members of non-normative heterosexual groups simultaneously orient to and reject social norms. ",
keywords = "non-normative sexuality, gender and sexuality, corpus linguistics",
author = "Frazer Heritage and Veronika Koller",
year = "2020",
month = sep,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1075/jls.19014.her",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "152--178",
journal = "Journal of Language and Sexuality",
issn = "2211-3770",
publisher = "John Benjamins Publishing Company",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Incels, in-groups, and ideologies

T2 - The representation of gendered social actors in a sexuality-based online community

AU - Heritage, Frazer

AU - Koller, Veronika

PY - 2020/9/30

Y1 - 2020/9/30

N2 - We present a study of the online forum Reddit, specifically a sub-forum for (typically heterosexual) men who identify as involuntary celibates or ‘incels’. Incels are an online imagined community/community of practice who wish to, but do not, have sexual relations with women. Owing to this identity, they view themselves as non-normative within broader society and see women and societal standards of masculinity as the cause of their problems. In this paper, we take a small corpus of 67,000 words generated from 50 threads created, and commented on, by incels. We analyse keywords, word frequencies, and concordance lines to explore the representation of gendered social actors. Keyword analysis reveals that references to gendered social actors are particularly salient within this community, leading to an analysis of all such social actors in the corpus. The findings suggest that incels position different groups of men in a hierarchy in which conventionally attractive men occupy the top position. Notably, we find that female social actors are not placed in a similar hierarchy. An additional appraisal analysis of the most frequently occurring male and female social actors shows that men are judged as incapacitated while women are seen as immoral, dishonest and capable of hurting men. Members of the online community also seem preoccupied with physical attractiveness.The study opens up a number of avenues for future research, especially into the complexities with which members of non-normative heterosexual groups simultaneously orient to and reject social norms.

AB - We present a study of the online forum Reddit, specifically a sub-forum for (typically heterosexual) men who identify as involuntary celibates or ‘incels’. Incels are an online imagined community/community of practice who wish to, but do not, have sexual relations with women. Owing to this identity, they view themselves as non-normative within broader society and see women and societal standards of masculinity as the cause of their problems. In this paper, we take a small corpus of 67,000 words generated from 50 threads created, and commented on, by incels. We analyse keywords, word frequencies, and concordance lines to explore the representation of gendered social actors. Keyword analysis reveals that references to gendered social actors are particularly salient within this community, leading to an analysis of all such social actors in the corpus. The findings suggest that incels position different groups of men in a hierarchy in which conventionally attractive men occupy the top position. Notably, we find that female social actors are not placed in a similar hierarchy. An additional appraisal analysis of the most frequently occurring male and female social actors shows that men are judged as incapacitated while women are seen as immoral, dishonest and capable of hurting men. Members of the online community also seem preoccupied with physical attractiveness.The study opens up a number of avenues for future research, especially into the complexities with which members of non-normative heterosexual groups simultaneously orient to and reject social norms.

KW - non-normative sexuality

KW - gender and sexuality

KW - corpus linguistics

U2 - 10.1075/jls.19014.her

DO - 10.1075/jls.19014.her

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9

SP - 152

EP - 178

JO - Journal of Language and Sexuality

JF - Journal of Language and Sexuality

SN - 2211-3770

IS - 2

ER -