"As a woman, I’m not supposed to like negging. Or rather, I’m not supposed to admit it."
That's the opening line of a little story that slid into my Insta feed this morning... a story that's quickly become the epicentre of internet outrage.
The piece, published by The Cut and written by Magdalene J. Taylor is simply titled 'In Defence of Negging' – four little words that have rightly (and no doubt intentionally) sent women everywhere into a fiery rage.
The comments on the Instagram post promoting the story are overwhelmingly (and not surprisingly) negative.
They range from simply dismissing the merits of the writer's argument:
"Once again I must say: NOT EVERY THOUGHT NEEDS TO BE AN ARTICLE."
To highlighting the 'pick me' and anti-feminist sentiments of the piece:
"It's giving, 'I'm not like other girls.'"
"How I Internalised the Patriarchy and Learned to Love it."
But before I take you through the article itself (and you're going to want to sit down, because it's a lot), let's backtrack for a moment to discuss...
What is negging?
It translates to 'negative comment' and it's a term that became popularised in men's pickup communities before it went mainstream in Neil Strauss' The Game.
I think being negged is kind of fun, actually. For @TheCut, I wrote about how perhaps, maybe, possibly the pick-up artist tactic has some truth to it — especially in how we think about desire. Don't take this as an invitation. https://t.co/A82srRaQ1F
— Magdalene J. Taylor (@magdajtaylor) August 23, 2023