Trusted, Automoderated users
25,837
edits
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
==Chapters Talking about Inceldom== | ==Chapters Talking about Inceldom== | ||
In it, Angela described a growing inequality of access to sexual intimacy between 'elite' men who can command female attention on demand, and [[incel]]s. She described this in a way similar to how [[Michel Houellebecq]] described sexual stratification in his 1994 book [[Whatever (novel)|Whatever]]. Like authors [[Michel Houellebecq|Houellebecq]] and [[Roger Devlin]], Nagle saw this increased stratification as partly a result of the decline of monogamy. The book uses the term 'incel' verabatim, and suggests that increased involuntary celibacy in general has fueled a lot of the culture wars and the successes of the right-wing in the United States. | In it, Angela described a growing inequality of access to sexual intimacy between 'elite' men who can command female attention on demand, and [[incel]]s. She described this in a way similar to how [[Michel Houellebecq]] described sexual stratification in his 1994 book [[Whatever (novel)|Whatever]]. Like authors [[Michel Houellebecq|Houellebecq]] and [[Roger Devlin]], Nagle saw this increased stratification as partly a result of the decline of monogamy. The book uses the term '[[incel]]' verabatim, and suggests that increased involuntary celibacy in general has fueled a lot of the culture wars and the successes of the right-wing in the United States. | ||
==Reaction== | ==Reaction== |