Narratives of success and failure in ressentiment: Assuming victimhood and transmuting frustration among young Korean men

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Standard

Narratives of success and failure in ressentiment : Assuming victimhood and transmuting frustration among young Korean men. / Capelos, Tereza; Nield, Ellen; Salmela, Mikko.

I: Social Sciences, Bind 12, Nr. 5, 2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Capelos, T, Nield, E & Salmela, M 2023, 'Narratives of success and failure in ressentiment: Assuming victimhood and transmuting frustration among young Korean men', Social Sciences, bind 12, nr. 5. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12050259

APA

Capelos, T., Nield, E., & Salmela, M. (2023). Narratives of success and failure in ressentiment: Assuming victimhood and transmuting frustration among young Korean men. Social Sciences, 12(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12050259

Vancouver

Capelos T, Nield E, Salmela M. Narratives of success and failure in ressentiment: Assuming victimhood and transmuting frustration among young Korean men. Social Sciences. 2023;12(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12050259

Author

Capelos, Tereza ; Nield, Ellen ; Salmela, Mikko. / Narratives of success and failure in ressentiment : Assuming victimhood and transmuting frustration among young Korean men. I: Social Sciences. 2023 ; Bind 12, Nr. 5.

Bibtex

@article{39916a8792ba443683421e05671c45fa,
title = "Narratives of success and failure in ressentiment: Assuming victimhood and transmuting frustration among young Korean men",
abstract = "In this article, we examine toxic masculinity, anti-feminist, anti-globalisation, and anti-military conscription positions in the narratives of what constitutes success and failure among young South Korean men during the COVID-19 pandemic. Misogynistic accounts attributed to the globalised effects of neoliberalism and its evolution through South Korean meritocratic competition, compounded by the social isolation of the pandemic, remain a puzzle psychologically, despite their toxic emotionality. We use the analytical framework of ressentiment to consolidate references to moral victimhood, indignation, a sense of destiny, powerlessness, and transvaluation, as components of a single emotional mechanism responsible for misogynistic accounts. In an empirical plausibility probe, we analyse qualitative surveys with young South Korean men and examine the content of the far-right social sharing site Ilbe (일베) which hosts conversations of young men about success and self-improvement. Our findings show envy, shame, and inefficacious anger transvaluated into to moral victimhood, misogynistic hatred, vindictiveness against women and feminists, and anti-globalisation stances. We discuss how the content of these narratives of success and failure in ressentiment relates to the electoral win of the right-wing People Power party in March 2022 which capitalised on anti-feminist grievances. We also consider the socio-political consequences of ressentiment narratives in the highly gendered and polarised South Korean society and expand the study of ressentiment outside the context of Western democracies where it has been most extensively elaborated.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, ressentiment, South Korea, incel, misogyny, victimhood, powerlessness, anger, CoVID-19",
author = "Tereza Capelos and Ellen Nield and Mikko Salmela",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.3390/socsci12050259",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
journal = "Social Sciences",
issn = "2076-0760",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Narratives of success and failure in ressentiment

T2 - Assuming victimhood and transmuting frustration among young Korean men

AU - Capelos, Tereza

AU - Nield, Ellen

AU - Salmela, Mikko

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - In this article, we examine toxic masculinity, anti-feminist, anti-globalisation, and anti-military conscription positions in the narratives of what constitutes success and failure among young South Korean men during the COVID-19 pandemic. Misogynistic accounts attributed to the globalised effects of neoliberalism and its evolution through South Korean meritocratic competition, compounded by the social isolation of the pandemic, remain a puzzle psychologically, despite their toxic emotionality. We use the analytical framework of ressentiment to consolidate references to moral victimhood, indignation, a sense of destiny, powerlessness, and transvaluation, as components of a single emotional mechanism responsible for misogynistic accounts. In an empirical plausibility probe, we analyse qualitative surveys with young South Korean men and examine the content of the far-right social sharing site Ilbe (일베) which hosts conversations of young men about success and self-improvement. Our findings show envy, shame, and inefficacious anger transvaluated into to moral victimhood, misogynistic hatred, vindictiveness against women and feminists, and anti-globalisation stances. We discuss how the content of these narratives of success and failure in ressentiment relates to the electoral win of the right-wing People Power party in March 2022 which capitalised on anti-feminist grievances. We also consider the socio-political consequences of ressentiment narratives in the highly gendered and polarised South Korean society and expand the study of ressentiment outside the context of Western democracies where it has been most extensively elaborated.

AB - In this article, we examine toxic masculinity, anti-feminist, anti-globalisation, and anti-military conscription positions in the narratives of what constitutes success and failure among young South Korean men during the COVID-19 pandemic. Misogynistic accounts attributed to the globalised effects of neoliberalism and its evolution through South Korean meritocratic competition, compounded by the social isolation of the pandemic, remain a puzzle psychologically, despite their toxic emotionality. We use the analytical framework of ressentiment to consolidate references to moral victimhood, indignation, a sense of destiny, powerlessness, and transvaluation, as components of a single emotional mechanism responsible for misogynistic accounts. In an empirical plausibility probe, we analyse qualitative surveys with young South Korean men and examine the content of the far-right social sharing site Ilbe (일베) which hosts conversations of young men about success and self-improvement. Our findings show envy, shame, and inefficacious anger transvaluated into to moral victimhood, misogynistic hatred, vindictiveness against women and feminists, and anti-globalisation stances. We discuss how the content of these narratives of success and failure in ressentiment relates to the electoral win of the right-wing People Power party in March 2022 which capitalised on anti-feminist grievances. We also consider the socio-political consequences of ressentiment narratives in the highly gendered and polarised South Korean society and expand the study of ressentiment outside the context of Western democracies where it has been most extensively elaborated.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - ressentiment

KW - South Korea

KW - incel

KW - misogyny

KW - victimhood

KW - powerlessness

KW - anger

KW - CoVID-19

U2 - 10.3390/socsci12050259

DO - 10.3390/socsci12050259

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

JO - Social Sciences

JF - Social Sciences

SN - 2076-0760

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 381078198