Main Page: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
no edit summary
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
<td valign="top" bgcolor="#dddddd"> | <td valign="top" bgcolor="#dddddd"> | ||
<!--ONLY EDIT THIS SECTION FOR SPELLING OR GRAMMAR OR READABILITY, THE CONTENT IS GOOD.... ONLY EDIT THIS SECTION FOR SPELLING OR GRAMMAR OR READABILITY, THE CONTENT IS GOOD....--> | <!--ONLY EDIT THIS SECTION FOR SPELLING OR GRAMMAR OR READABILITY, THE CONTENT IS GOOD.... ONLY EDIT THIS SECTION FOR SPELLING OR GRAMMAR OR READABILITY, THE CONTENT IS GOOD....--> | ||
[[Incel]], is short for and means, ''''involuntarily celibate'''', colloquially known as, "can't get laid for a long time", a term describing a life circumstance. It is not a subculture, organized group, movement, or a philosophy. Although individual philosophies, memes, or subcultures like the [[blackpill]] sometimes emerge on individual forums dedicated to involuntary celibates and go in and out of fashion. '[[Involuntarily celibate]]' or '[[incel]]' is the particular phrasing of, "can't get laid", that entered academia as an [[Donnelly Study#Incel is Now a Valid Academic Sociological Term|academic sociological term]]. This happened through the [[Donnelly Study]]. The [[Donnelly Study]] defined incels as people who would like to have a sexual or romantic partner of the gender they are attracted to but can't find one for free for 6 months or more, and then remain celibate. The date may seem arbitrary, but there had to be a cutoff point, and [[Denise Donnelly]] chose 6 months as that factored in that almost everyone goes without sexual intimacy for months, but it is only unusual after a few months. Most people who self-identify as incel are not [[standardcel]]s as they cannot find *anyone* willing to have sex with them for free. [[Ton den Boon|The first lexicographer to define "incel"]], defined it as a gender-neutral life cirumstance rather than a subculture. Its unabbreviated form was coined in 1739 by [[Antoine Banier]]. | [[Incel]], is short for and means, ''''involuntarily celibate'''', colloquially known as, "can't get laid for a long time", a term describing a life circumstance. It is not a subculture, organized group, movement, or a philosophy. Although individual philosophies, memes, or subcultures like the [[blackpill]] sometimes emerge on individual forums dedicated to involuntary celibates and go in and out of fashion. '[[Involuntarily celibate]]' or '[[incel]]' is the particular phrasing of, "can't get laid", that entered academia as an [[Donnelly Study#Incel is Now a Valid Academic Sociological Term|academic sociological term]]. This happened through the [[Donnelly Study]]. The [[Donnelly Study]] defined incels as people who would like to have a sexual or romantic partner of the gender they are attracted to but can't find one for free for 6 months or more, and then remain celibate. The date may seem arbitrary, but there had to be a cutoff point, and [[Denise Donnelly]] chose 6 months as that factored in that almost everyone goes without sexual intimacy for months, but it is only unusual after a few months. Most people who self-identify as incel are not [[standardcel]]s as they cannot find *anyone* willing to have sex with them for free. [[Ton den Boon|The first lexicographer to define "incel"]], defined it as a gender-neutral life cirumstance rather than a subculture. Its unabbreviated form was coined in 1739 by [[Antoine Banier]] in his book on the history of Ancient Athens. | ||
Inceldom overlaps but is distinct from '[[sexual frustration]]', in that an involuntary celibate may simply accept their incelibacy and not feel bad about it. | Inceldom overlaps but is distinct from '[[sexual frustration]]', in that an involuntary celibate may simply accept their incelibacy and not feel bad about it. |