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How to make an incel: mapping the gendered journey to antifeminism and misogyny

How to make an incel: mapping the gendered journey to antifeminism and misogyny
How to make an incel: mapping the gendered journey to antifeminism and misogyny
The involuntary celibate or ‘incel’ phenomenon has received significant academic attention in the last six years, spanning security and terrorism, critical gender, and psychological research. As this community is associated with increasing levels of violence, antifeminism, and misogyny, it is imperative the pathway into this identity is understood. To date this area has received limited academic attention, with most research focusing on the extant actors and their actions through spatiotemporally static analysis of individual forums or distanced surveys within dialectical lenses of social structure or individual experience.

This research remedies these issues, employing an immersive ethnography conducted across 10 digital platforms combined with reflexive thematic analysis of nine semi structured interviews with current and former incels to both map the incel technoscape and determine the causal mechanisms responsible for an incel identity. This collective analysis of the incel digital ecosystem conceptualised an Incel Network, a three-tiered assortment of websites, platforms, and forums in which incel ideology is progressively disseminated. Applying Raewyn Connell’s theory of gender, Joseph Pleck’s traditional masculine ideology, and Magaret Archer’s theory of reflexivity, the impacts and influences of a gendered social structure upon ‘failed’ men, their resulting lived experiences, and conscious deliberative responses involving engagement with the Incel Network reveal the process through which men become incels.

As the first to both conceptualise incel digital space in unison and relativity and also theorise the journey into an incel identity through the abridgment of structure, experience, and agency, these findings offer a significant original contribution to an emerging field. Understanding the structural causes and individual responses to the events and experiences that lead to an incel identity permits the generation of tailored digital, education and therapeutic strategies to deter young and adolescent men from performing the identity and associated violence and misogyny.
incels, masculinities, manosphere, misogyny
University of Southampton
Lucy, Stu
ef4946b6-32cd-49cf-a955-1b5e07ff9bd8
Lucy, Stu
ef4946b6-32cd-49cf-a955-1b5e07ff9bd8
Walker, Charlie
73a65297-4ef1-4ad0-88ea-1626f11f0665
Weal, Mark
e8fd30a6-c060-41c5-b388-ca52c81032a4

Lucy, Stu (2025) How to make an incel: mapping the gendered journey to antifeminism and misogyny. University of Southampton, Doctoral Thesis, 405pp.

Record type: Thesis (Doctoral)

Abstract

The involuntary celibate or ‘incel’ phenomenon has received significant academic attention in the last six years, spanning security and terrorism, critical gender, and psychological research. As this community is associated with increasing levels of violence, antifeminism, and misogyny, it is imperative the pathway into this identity is understood. To date this area has received limited academic attention, with most research focusing on the extant actors and their actions through spatiotemporally static analysis of individual forums or distanced surveys within dialectical lenses of social structure or individual experience.

This research remedies these issues, employing an immersive ethnography conducted across 10 digital platforms combined with reflexive thematic analysis of nine semi structured interviews with current and former incels to both map the incel technoscape and determine the causal mechanisms responsible for an incel identity. This collective analysis of the incel digital ecosystem conceptualised an Incel Network, a three-tiered assortment of websites, platforms, and forums in which incel ideology is progressively disseminated. Applying Raewyn Connell’s theory of gender, Joseph Pleck’s traditional masculine ideology, and Magaret Archer’s theory of reflexivity, the impacts and influences of a gendered social structure upon ‘failed’ men, their resulting lived experiences, and conscious deliberative responses involving engagement with the Incel Network reveal the process through which men become incels.

As the first to both conceptualise incel digital space in unison and relativity and also theorise the journey into an incel identity through the abridgment of structure, experience, and agency, these findings offer a significant original contribution to an emerging field. Understanding the structural causes and individual responses to the events and experiences that lead to an incel identity permits the generation of tailored digital, education and therapeutic strategies to deter young and adolescent men from performing the identity and associated violence and misogyny.

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Published date: 2025
Keywords: incels, masculinities, manosphere, misogyny

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504605
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504605
PURE UUID: dfc38cf6-5ccd-4128-88a9-548a46957bde
ORCID for Stu Lucy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2109-5024
ORCID for Charlie Walker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4875-3311
ORCID for Mark Weal: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6251-8786

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 16 Sep 2025 16:49
Last modified: 17 Sep 2025 02:08

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Contributors

Author: Stu Lucy ORCID iD
Thesis advisor: Charlie Walker ORCID iD
Thesis advisor: Mark Weal ORCID iD

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