Saturday, November 23, 2019
The Concept of Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft
The Concept of Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaftà are German words that mean community and society respectively. Introduced in classical social theory, they are used to discuss the different kinds of social ties that exist in small, rural, traditional societies versus large-scale, modern, industrial ones. Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft in Sociology Early German sociologist Ferdinandà Tà ¶nnies introduced the concepts ofà Gemeinschaft (Gay-mine-shaft)à andà Gesellschaftà (Gay-zel-shaft) in his 1887 bookà Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft. Tà ¶nnies presented these as analytic concepts which he found useful for studying the differences between the kinds of rural, peasant societies that were being replaced across Europe by modern, industrial ones.à Following this, Max Weber further developed these concepts as ideal types in his bookà Economy and Societyà (1921)à and in his essay Class, Status, and Party. For Weber, they were useful as ideal types for tracking and studying the changes in societies, social structure, and social order over time. The Personal and Moral Nature of Social Ties Within aà Gemeinschaftà According toà Tà ¶nnies,à Gemeinschaft, or community, is comprised ofà personal social ties and in-person interactions that are defined by traditional social rules and result in an overall cooperative social organization. The values and beliefs common to aà ââ¬â¹Gemeinschaftà are organized around appreciation for personal ties, and because of this, social interactions are personal in nature.à Tà ¶nnies believed that these kinds of interactions and social ties were driven by emotions and sentiments (Wesenwille), by a sense of moral obligation to others, and were common to rural, peasant, small-scale, homogenous societies.à When Weber wrote about these terms inà Economy and Society, he suggested that aà Gemeinschaftà is produced by the subjective feeling that is tied to affect and tradition. The Rational and Efficient Nature of Social Ties Within aà Gesellschaft On the other hand,à Gesellschaft, or society, is comprised of impersonal and indirect social ties and interactions that are not necessarily carried out face-to-face (they can be carried out via telegram, telephone, in written form, through a chain of command, etc.). The ties and interactions that characterize aà Gesellschaftà are guided by formal values and beliefs that are directed by rationality and efficiency, as well as by economic, political, and self-interests. While social interaction is guided byà Wesenwille, or seemingly naturally occurring emotionsà in aà Gemeinschaft, in aà Gesellschaft,à Kà ¼rwille, or rational will, guides it. This kind of social organization is common to large-scale, modern, industrial, and cosmopolitan societies that are structured around large organizations of government and private enterprise, both of which often take the form of bureaucracies. Organizations and the social order as a whole are organized by a complex division of labor, roles, and tasks. As Weber explained, such a form of social order is the result of rational agreement by mutual consent, meaning members of society agree to participate and abide the given rules, norms, and practices because rationality tells them that they benefit by doing so. Tà ¶nnies observed that the traditional bonds of family, kinship, and religion that provide the basis for social ties, values, and interactions in aà Gemeinschaftà are displaced by scientific rationality and self-interest in aà Gesellschaft. While social relations are cooperative in aà Gemeinschaftà it is more common to find competition in aà Gesellschaft. Gemeinschaftà andà Gesellschaftà in Modern Times While it is true that one can observe distinctly different types of social organizations prior to and after the industrial age, and when comparing rural versus urban environments, its important to recognize thatà Gemeinschaftà andà Gesellschaft are ideal types. This means that though they are useful conceptual tools for seeing and understanding how society works, they are rarely if ever observed exactly as they are defined, nor are they mutually exclusive. Instead, when you look at the social world around you, you are likely to see both forms of social order present. You may find that you are part of communities in which social ties and social interaction are guided by a sense of traditional and moral responsibility while simultaneously living within a complex, post-industrial society.
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