4chan: The Skeleton Key to the Rise of Trump
(AL can't handle the @ in the link so I'm giving you the google search: https://www.google.com/search?q=4chan%3 ... n+–+Medium)
It's a long essay, but it's an interesting read. While obviously skewed, I think there's a possibility it's accurate on some points. It's prompted me to look up a few papers on 4chan in the hopes that there was some peer-reviewed studies on its cultural core and explanations for its behaviors and involvement in some of the incidents that the essay above mentions, and from what I've read so far, I've changed my mind on some of its more key arguments. That is, I now disagree with it on major ideas.
First let me explain why this resonated with me.
I have been really fucking confused the last few years as to how half the anime meme pages on facebook have openly embraced severely racist, mysogynist, or alt-right tendencies, showed open support for nazis, etc. I've honestly wondered where on earth this came from and what the connection was between fascism and anime, or racism and anime, because it never made any sense to me. This is the first thing I've read that attempts to produce an explanation for this phenomenon.
Certainly, there is an insult culture, and definitely part of it is self-defamatory in nature. But this claims that 4channers do this out of a genuine feeling of inadequacy. One of the things I would like to discuss is whether this is accurate.Also like adolescent boys, 4chan users were deeply sensitive and guarded. They disguised their own sensitivity (namely, their fear that they would be, “forever alone”) by extreme insensitivity. The rules, like everything else, were always half in jest. Everything had to be a done with at least a twinkle of winking irony. This was an escape route, a way of never having to admit to your peers that you were in fact expressing something from your heart, in other words?—?that you were indeed vulnerable.
I don't think it is on the whole. I could see that there would be an aspect of that, maybe, but I don't see it as the driving force. Rather, I see the driving force behind the insult culture as this:
This is from "Tits or GTFO: The logics of misogyny on 4chan’s Random – /b/", by Vyshali Manivannan of Rutgers UniversityThe antagonistic trolling practices directed at newfaggotry on /b/ are highly variable, demonstrating misandry, racism, heterosexism, religious discrimination, ableism and mentalism, weightism, general lookism, and so on. This is in keeping with the long history of performative ‘insult dialectic’ that can be mapped through popular culture to the Afro-American practice of ‘the dozens’, which Dollard (1939: 8–10) argued was organised around gratification gained through the expression of forbidden themes (remarks about one’s family and mother in particular) and aggressive interactions that escalate as participants trade insults. In accordance with this insult dialectic, 4channers tailor abusive rhetoric to the revealed identity factors of the offending newfags in question, deterring self-oriented practices through personalized demoralization.
That is, I definitely see a large driving force behind offensive, exclusionary, racist, mysogynist, and adding to this, pedophilic memes, is simply the joy of being perverse. It feels like it's a type of counterculture where it's avant-garde to basically trash anything society holds sacred.
And people of course say well, it's all just joking around, but the more you see of it, you realize it's not really. It's so bad that it's becoming normalized, and one thing that the first essay gets right is that it actually does change culture. I mean, it was normal for men in ancient Greece to have homosexual relations with young boys. Did the fundamental nature of what a human being is change suddenly in the last 2000 years? Of course not--cultural norms influence personal values, attitudes, and behaviors, and so a community being openly racist is sure as hell going to create more racists even without the already-racists coming out of the wordwork into their newfound safe space. Same goes with normalizing pedophilia--sexual preference can be a learned behavior, especially with young people, so it's certainly not something you can just laugh off and pretend it's not a problem.
On misogyny specifically
This is from a book review of a book called "Kill All the Normies". The review was written by Mark Dunbar, and the book is apparently written by a "Nagle". It's basically a more scholarly repeat of the same idea in the essay, that 4channers are frustrated that they're not desired by the opposite sex.The skinny on our current situation—that Nagle is too polite and scholarly to say—is that there are a lot of men nowadays who are servile and credulous but who desperately desire to be perceived as independent and enlightened. They want to be sexually successful but don’t want to bother with being interesting or charming or physically attractive. They want to take the ready-made answers they hear on YouTube, then regurgitate them on Facebook, and complain about how everyone else is herd-minded. They want to ridicule the cult of feeling while remaining sentimental about the forces of hierarchy and tradition. They want to convince themselves and others that it’s “edgy/countercultural/transgressive” to be loudmouths for the leisure class.
And that's something I'm actually completely unsure on. It sounds dismissive, but having had several sociology classes, I can't really dismiss it out of hand. After all, the dominant male culture does reinforce a culture of being 1) in control, 2) virile, 3) a provider, in the family context (and some papers tie frustrations into economics heavily as well, as does the first essay), and I feel like a lot of men do tend to have a strange unrealistic view of relationships that could, in my mind, create this extreme dissatisfaction with the opposite sex for perceived slights of not having sex with them. I mean you see it in plenty of other places other than the internet. So it's vague, but there's definitely a culture that can prevailingly control interactions, attitudes, and behaviors to such a degree that I'm not sure it would be strange for thousands of men to all agree that if she breathe she a thot. Either way, cultural beliefs about sex and relationships tend to control a lot of human social behavior.
And then coming full circle, there's the anime. That's what really ties in that first essay. I can't see any other reason for anime to be a big part of alt-right culture if not for the proposition that the hoards of disenchanted men being willfully ironic and offensive are simply often anime fans because the same people tend to live out escapist fantasies. The section on gamergate in the article is worth discussing in this regard.
I'm sorry this was somewhat rambling, but it's a really difficult thing to begin to make sense of in the first place.
I shall dump my notes and collected quotes from reading papers, should they be of interest
