A crucial, often overlooked aspect of Soral’s essay is his spatial analysis. The "drague" does not occur in a vacuum; it happens in the metro stations, the street corners, and the nightclubs of Paris. Soral maps the city as a hierarchy of sexual accessibility.
Soral spends an entire chapter deconstructing the nightclub as a "trap for the proletariat." He argues that clubs are designed to extract money from men while giving women all the power (free entry, free drinks, sexual skimming). The loud music prevents conversation (the working-class man's only rhetorical weapon), and the lighting favors youth and pure aesthetics over character. He advises his reader to abandon the club entirely. Soral Alain - Sociologie du dragueur.pdf
Published in the mid-90s, Sociologie du dragueur remains one of Alain Soral's most famous and polarizing works. Far from a typical "how-to" guide for seduction, the book attempts a rigorous sociological analysis of the dragueur (the street seducer) as a figure of social resistance and personal struggle. A crucial, often overlooked aspect of Soral’s essay