Alain - Sociologie Du Dragueur.pdf — Soral

Drawing on sociobiology (a move away from his earlier Marxist analysis), Soral asserts that male “hunting” behavior and female “nesting/mate-choice” behavior are hardwired. He uses animal metaphors (peacocks, bowerbirds) to argue that “game” is simply a cultural expression of evolutionary drives.

Soral argues that seduction is not a matter of individual psychology but a social game dictated by economic and cultural capital. He distinguishes between:

He claims modern dating norms are biased toward the former, thereby “dispossessing” working-class men of natural seductive ability. Soral Alain - Sociologie du dragueur.pdf

Why analyze a relatively obscure PDF dating back to the early 2010s? Because "Soral Alain - Sociologie du dragueur.pdf" is a foundational text for the "manosphere" in Francophone Europe. It bridges the gap between the Anglo-American PUA community (Mystery, Roosh V) and the European New Right.

Before Andrew Tate, before the red pill became a hashtag, Soral was distributing this PDF for free. It is the missing link between Bourdieu’s Distinction (a sociology of taste) and the blackpill nihilism of incel forums. Drawing on sociobiology (a move away from his

For researchers studying digital radicalization, this document is a goldmine. It shows how a political ideologue weaponizes dating anxiety. The pathway is simple:

The .pdf is a recruitment tool dressed as a field guide. He claims modern dating norms are biased toward

To understand the PDF, one must understand the author’s intellectual trajectory. By the time Soral wrote Sociologie du dragueur, he had already broken with traditional right-wing parties and the mainstream left. He was developing his concept of the "petit-bourgeois" as the enemy of authentic working-class culture. In Soral’s universe, neoliberalism and cultural Marxism (a term he uses liberally) have corrupted every sphere of life, including seduction.

Most dating advice literature falls into two categories: the clinical (neuroscience of attraction) and the performative (Neil Strauss’s The Game). Soral rejects both. He argues that modern "drague" (flirting/seduction) has been colonized by financial logic and feminine hypergamy, a concept borrowed from evolutionary psychology but twisted into a class critique.

The PDF is addressed primarily to the "frustrated young man." Not the incel, necessarily, but the Soralian everyman: a working- or middle-class male who feels disarmed by the rules of post-1968 society. For Soral, the difficulty men face in dating is not a personal failing; it is a sociological consequence of systemic decay.