HomeLifestyleA dictionary of the manosphere: five terms to understand the language of online male supremacists

A dictionary of the manosphere: five terms to understand the language of online male supremacists

Post the release of Netflix's 'Adolescence' about Incel culture, we revisit an article about manosphere communities, many of which 'have become spaces where explicit anti-women and anti-feminist sentiment abound.'

March 26, 2025 / 17:40 IST
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Vocabulary of the manosphere: Recognising how language and ideology are connected can help with deradicalisation efforts, or ideally prevent radicalisation in the first place. And for young men and boys themselves, this awareness can improve their digital literacy and help them resist manipulation. (Image credit: Cottonbro via Pexels)
Vocabulary of the manosphere: Recognising how language and ideology are connected can help with deradicalisation efforts, or ideally prevent radicalisation in the first place. And for young men and boys themselves, this awareness can improve their digital literacy and help them resist manipulation. (Image credit: Cottonbro via Pexels)

By Robert Lawson, Birmingham City University

Thot. White knight. Red pilled. Cuck. Beta. Soyboy. Unicorn. Chad. To many people, these words won’t mean much. To others, they are a core part of the vocabulary of the “manosphere” – a collection of websites, social media accounts and forums dedicated to men’s issues, from health and fitness to dating and men’s rights.

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Many (though not all) manosphere communities have become spaces where explicit anti-women and anti-feminist sentiment abound. These include incels, men’s rights activists, red-pillers, pick-up artists and male separatists.

I’m interested in how men use language, especially in the media and online, and what this tells us about contemporary masculinity and gender relations. In my recent book, I show how the language of the manosphere creates a culture of exclusion, denigration (mainly of women, but also of other men), male power and entitlement.