Seduction, Inc The pickup industry mates market logic with the arts of
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Bog'liqSeduction
Seduction, Inc The pickup industry mates market logic with the arts of seduction – turning human intimacy into hard labour Striding from the back of the conference room, the trainer calls for our attention. He asks everyone to explain why they’re here. The first student stands up: ‘I’ve come to get hands-on experience.’ After a pause, he adds: ‘Obviously, if I get laid that’s a big bonus.’ Another says he has no problem meeting women, but for some reason he never manages to date the kind he really wants. The trainer nods with recognition: ‘Settling is the worst thing you can do. Because every time you see a guy with a hotter girl, you think: “I wish I was him.”’ One of the last men to introduce himself – visibly uncomfortable, shifting in his chair – starts to explain that he’s a ‘decent guy’. The trainer interrupts him: ‘The problem is, you’re not the guy that’s going to take them home and bend them over … We need to get you to be that guy.’ On any given weekend, events such as this one in London take place in cities around the world – from New York to Tel Aviv, Stockholm to Mumbai. The attendees, largely in their 20s and 30s, receive detailed instruction in the so-called ‘art of seduction’: learning and rehearsing techniques to meet and seduce women. Commonly known as ‘pickup’ or ‘game’, the seduction industry first took shape in the United States in the early 2000s. What began as a few online forums and meetup groups soon gave rise to commercial products and services. Some of those with a personal interest in seduction began to style themselves as professionals, offering practical training and personal development for heterosexual men who wanted greater choice and control in their intimate lives. While deploying the language of artistry – with terms such as ‘pickup artist’ (or ‘PUA’) – seduction trainers frame their activities as quasi-scientific endeavours, involving the development of hypotheses, strategic field-testing and the cultivation of expertise. Their thinking is often shaped by evolutionary psychology and management theory, particularly of the pop-sci and self-help variety, and comprises a suite of techniques that men can use to navigate their interactions with women. The basic precept is that male-female relations are subject to certain underlying principles that, once understood, can be readily manipulated. A typical training session might include instruction in female psychology and body language, alongside lessons in mindset and motivation. Students receive detailed guidance about how to approach and ‘open’, as well as about general conversation patterns. Further direction might include techniques to sexually ‘escalate’, and strategies for dealing with resistance. With an emphasis on experiential learning, virtually all live events encompass an ‘in-field’ component where men approach women on the streets, in shops and cafés, at pubs and clubs. As well as choreographing men’s interactions with women, trainers observe and give feedback. Some use covert devices so as to watch interactions without the women’s awareness. In short, men are taught how to walk, talk, stand, speak, think and feel. Through seduction training, all aspects of the self are made available for assessment and improvement. The aim is not simply to impart a discrete skill set, but to inculcate deeper dispositions of body and mind based on a particular conception of what it means – and what it takes – to be a man. Unsurprisingly for an industry that promises men ‘mastery’ with women, seduction has attracted a good deal of feminist commentary and criticism. Websites such as Jezebel publish articles challenging its underlying assumptions and raising concerns about the propensity of its teachings to promote sexual harassment, coercion and violence. Prominent seduction trainers are subject to campaigns seeking to restrict the availability of their products and services, and to limit their ability to travel internationally to teach. Feminists and others have good reasons for attacking the industry. Yet much existing commentary tends to parcel it off as anomalous – a subcultural oddity that, already contained, can be easily eliminated. In this way, those who participate in this sphere are framed as readily recognisable and uniquely deplorable – an ‘army of sleazebags, saddos and weirdos’, in the words of Hadley Freeman at The Download 60.27 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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