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Ferdinand Tönnies

Ferdinand Tönnies (German: [ˈtœniːs]; 26 July 1855 – 9 April 1936) was a German sociologist, economist, and philosopher. He was a significant contributor to sociological theory and field studies, best known for distinguishing between two types of social groups, Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft (community and society). He co-founded the German Society for Sociology together with Max Weber and Georg Simmel and many other founders. He was president of the society from 1909 to 1933,[1] after which he was ousted for having criticized the Nazis. Tönnies was regarded as the first proper German sociologist and published over 900 works, contributing to many areas of sociology and philosophy. Tönnies, Max Weber, and Georg Simmel are considered the founding fathers of classical German sociology. Though there has been a resurgence of interest in Weber and Simmel, Tönnies has not drawn as much attention.[2]

Ferdinand Tönnies
Tönnies, c. 1915
Born(1855-07-26)26 July 1855
Died9 April 1936(1936-04-09) (aged 80)
NationalityGerman
Alma materUniversity of Jena
University of Bonn
University of Leipzig
University of Berlin
University of Tübingen
Known forSociological Theory; distinction between two types of social groups, Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft
Scientific career
FieldsSociology
InstitutionsUniversity of Kiel

Biography edit

Early life edit

Ferdinand Tönnies was born on 26 July 1855 on the Haubarg "De Reap," Oldenswort on the Eiderstedt Peninsula into a wealthy farmer's family in North Frisia, Schleswig, then under Danish rule. Tönnies was the only sociologist of his generation who came from the countryside. He was the third child of church chief and farmer August Ferdinand Tönnies (1822–1883), and his wife Ida Frederica (born Mau, 1826–1915), came from a theological family from East Holstein. His father, of Frisian ancestry, was a successful farmer and cattle rancher, while his mother hailed from a line of Lutheran ministers. The two had seven children, four sons and three daughters. On the day he was born, Ferdinand Tönnies received the baptismal name of Ferdinand Julius and moved to Husum, on the North Sea, after his father retired in 1864.

Education and academic career edit

Tönnies enrolled at the University of Strasbourg after graduating from high school in 1872. They took the time to utilize his freedom to travel, exploring the academic fields of the University of Jena, Bonn, Leipzig, Berlin, and Tübingen. At age 22, he received a doctorate in philology at the University of Tübingen in 1877 (with a Latin thesis on the ancient Siwa Oasis).[3] However, by this time, his main interests had switched to political philosophy and social issues. After completing postdoctoral work at the University of Berlin, he traveled to London to continue his studies on the seventeenth-century English political thinker Thomas Hobbes. Tönnies earned a Privatdozent in philosophy at the University of Kiel from 1909 to 1933 after submitting a draft of his major book, Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft, as his Habilitationsschrift in 1881. He held this post at the University of Kiel for only three years. Because he sympathized with the Hamburg dockers' strike of 1896,[4] the conservative Prussian government considered him to be a social democrat, and Tönnies would not be called to a professorial chair until 1913. He returned to Kiel as a professor emeritus in 1921 where he took on a teaching position in sociology and taught until 1933 when he was ousted by the Nazis, due to earlier publications in which he had criticized them and had endorsed the Social Democratic Party.[5][6] Remaining in Kiel, he died three years later in isolation in his home in 1936.

Sociological contributions edit

Many of his writings on sociological theories furthered pure sociology, including Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft (1887). He coined the metaphysical term Voluntarism. Tönnies also contributed to the study of social change, particularly on public opinion,[7] customs and technology, crime, and suicide.[8] He also had a vivid interest in methodology, especially statistics, and sociological research, inventing his own technique of statistical association.[9] After publishing Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft, Tönnies focused aspects of the social life such as morals, folkways, and public opinion. However he is best known for his published work on Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft because his later works applied the same concepts to aspects of social life.[10]

Chronological timeline of life and career edit

  • 1855: Born, 26 July, Oldenswort, in the Duchy of Schleswig
  • 1864: Prusso-Austrian invasion and absorption of Schleswig-Holstein into Prussia after contest with Denmark.
  • 1865: Tönnies family moved to Husum, where his father took up merchant banking.
  • 1867: Tönnies entered the local grammar school, studied Greek, Latin and German classical literature.
  • 1870: Franco-Prussian War; creation of German empire. Tönnies met Schleswegian poet and folk-hero, Theodor Storm, who became a life-long influence.
  • 1871-7: Studied at the universities of Strasbourg, Jena, Leipzig, Berlin, Kiel and Tübingen. Gained doctorate in Greek philology at Tübingen. Became a close friend of Friedrich Paulsen, an admirer of Kant, Lassalle and Hobbes.
  • 1878: First visit to England. Worked on Hobbes' manuscripts at the British Museum, Oxford and Hardwick.
  • 1879–81: Published 'Remarks on the Philosophy of Thomas Hobbes', in Vierteljahrsschrift für wissenschaftliche Philosophie (Quarterly Journal of Scientific Philosophy)
  • 1881: An early version of Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft submitted as his Habilitationsschrift at University of Kiel.
  • 1887: First edition of Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft: Abhandlung des Communismus und des Socialismus als empirischer Culturformen (Community and Society: An Essay on Communism and Socialism as Historical Social System).
  • 1889: After prolonged delay, Tönnies' editions of Hobbes' Elements of Law Natural and Politic and Behemoth published in English.
  • 1890: Failed to obtain a university professorship; became a Privatdozent at Kiel.
  • 1892: Helped found Society for Ethical Culture, the vehicle for his life-long involvement in various co-operative, social reform and self-improvement movements.
  • 1893: Offered a university chair, on condition that he gave up Society for Ethical Culture, which he refused.
  • 1894: Marriage to Marie Sieck, daughter of a Protestant minister from the Schleswegian town of Eutin. Five children born over the next ten years.
  • 1896: First edition of Thomas Hobbes. Leben und Lehre (Thomas Hobbes: Life and Work). Tönnies' support for Hamburg dock strike compounds his difficulties in gaining a university chair.
  • 1899–1900: Tönnies' prize essay on 'Philosophical Terminology' published in an English translation by Helen Bosanquet in Mind.
  • 1904: Visited America for International Arts and Sciences Congress at St Louis. Contacts with sociologists of the Chicago School (sociology).
  • 1908: House guest of Max and Marianne Weber during the International Philosophy Congress at Heidelberg.
  • 1909: First edition of his book on Die Sitte (Custom). With Max Weber and Georg Simmel, founding member of the German Society for Sociology. Tönnies would be president of this body for most of his life.
  • 1912: Second edition with new subtitle of Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft: Grundbegriffe der reinen Soziologie (Community and Society: Basic Concepts in Pure Sociology) and of Tönnies' study of Hobbes.
  • 1913: Secures his first permanent chair, a professorship of 'economic political science', at the university of Kiel.
  • 1917: Publication of Der englische Staat und der deutsche Staat (The English State and the German State).
  • 1920: Third edition of Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft.
  • 1921: Publication of Marx, Leben und Lehre (Marx, Life and Work).
  • 1922: Publication of Kritik der öffentlichen Meinung (Critique of Public Opinion).
  • 1923: Autobiographical sketch published in Die Philosophie der Gegenwart in Selbstdarstellung (The Philosophy of the Present in Self-Representation).
  • 1925: Tönnies's major writings collected in Soziologische Studien und Kritiken (Sociological Studies and Critiques). Third edition of book on Thomas Hobbes.
  • 1931: Publication of Einführung in die Soziologie (Introduction to Sociology).
  • 1932: Joined the Social Democratic party to support resistance to the rise of fascism.
  • 1933: Adolf Hitler becomes chancellor of Germany. Tönnies stripped of his honorary professorship at Kiel, academic pension and personal library by local Nazi administration.
  • 1935: A major conference at Leipzig in honour of Tönnies's eightieth birthday. Eighth edition of Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft. Publication of his final work, Geist der Neuzeit (Spirit of Modern Times).
  • 1936: Death of Tönnies.
  • 2000: Josie Klaus Heberle, Tönnies' great great grandchild was born in Jeffersonville, IN.

Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft edit

Tönnies distinguished between two types of social groupings. Gemeinschaft—often translated as community (or left untranslated)—refers to groups based on feelings of togetherness and mutual bonds, which are felt like a goal to be kept up, their members being means for this goal. Gesellschaft—often translated as society—on the other hand, refers to groups that are sustained by it being instrumental for their members' aims and goals. The equilibrium in Gemeinschaft is achieved through means of social control, such as morals, conformism, and exclusion, while Gesellschaft keeps its balance through police, laws, tribunals, and prisons. Amish and Hasidic communities are examples of Gemeinschaft, while states are types of Gesellschaft. Rules in Gemeinschaft are implicit, while Gesellschaft has explicit rules (written laws).

Gemeinschaft may be exemplified historically by a family or a neighborhood in a pre-modern (rural) society; Gesellschaft by a joint-stock company or a state in a modern society, i.e. the society when Tönnies lived. Gesellschaft relationships arose in an urban and capitalist setting, characterized by individualism and impersonal monetary connections between people. Social ties were often instrumental and superficial, with self-interest and exploitation increasingly the norm. Examples are corporations, states, or voluntary associations. In his book Einteilung der Soziologie (Classification of Sociology) he distinguished between three disciplines of sociology, being Pure or Theoretical (reine, theoretische) Sociology, Applied (angewandte) Sociology, and Empirical (emprische) Sociology.

His distinction between social groupings is based on the assumption that there are only two primary forms of an actor's will to approve of other men. For Tönnies, such approval is by no means self-evident; he is pretty influenced by Thomas Hobbes.[2] Following his "essential will" ("Wesenwille"), an actor will see himself as a means to serve the goals of social grouping; very often, it is an underlying, subconscious force. Groupings formed around an essential will are called a Gemeinschaft. The other will is the "arbitrary will" ("Kürwille"): An actor sees a social grouping as a means to further his individual goals, so it is purposive and future-oriented. Groupings around the latter are called Gesellschaft. Whereas the membership in a Gemeinschaft is self-fulfilling, a Gesellschaft is instrumental for its members. In pure sociology—theoretically—these two standard types of will are to be strictly separated; in applied sociology—empirically—they are always mixed.

Gender Polarity in "Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft"

What is less well-known when discussing the work of Tönnies is that he frequently uses gender concepts to explain his main ideas. Essential will-arbitrary will, Gemeinschaft-Gesellschaft, are all thought of in terms of the polarity of feminine-masculine. Gemeinschaft, for example, is feminine: "the eternal-feminine," since motherliness is the basis of all being together. Essential will is also feminine, whereas Gesellschaft and arbitrary choice are masculine.[11] Tönnies' theory appears to consign him to a nineteenth-century view of the public world belonging to males, while women are relegated to the private realm, as it links together Gemeinschaft/home/woman as opposed to Gesellschaft/marketplace/man.

Views on Family

In his article "Funfzehn Thesen zur Erneuerung eines Familienlebens," published in 1893, he claims that the dissolution of family life has tainted modern society's blood. Tonnies believed that one of the most important ways to resurrect Gemeinschaft in the modern world would be to improve and prolong family life.[11]

The demise of the family is caused by modern capitalism and its consequences: low pay, excessive hours of labor for men and women alike, and terrible living conditions. He believes family life has to be revitalized since it is the foundation of all culture and morals.[11] In this case, he proposed two solutions that revolved around the idea of unions devoted to aid and nurture, as he would claim, "the family spirit."

Two Solutions

  1. The first would be groupings of organically linked families who, in order to strengthen family life, would preserve family documents, correspond regularly, gather at family festivals, and assist one another by pooling resources. A family fund would be set up to help those who had fallen on hard times or who required money to develop unique skills.
  2. The second version would bring together unrelated families and be dedicated to a simpler and healthier way of life, a more serious and reasonable method of social interaction, and a better comprehension of masculine and feminine thought. Three to five families would choose to band together to achieve these goals; eventually, they might live together in a common residence, engage in cooperative purchasing, and even share products. Groups may eventually band together in order to gain greater economic and moral power.[11]

Criticisms edit

Tönnies' distinction between Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft, like others between tradition and modernity, has been criticized for over-generalizing differences between societies and implying that all societies were following a similar evolutionary path, an argument which Tönnies himself never actually proclaimed.[12]

Impact edit

 
Memorial Bust of Ferdinand Tonnies. Sculptor: Raimund Kittl revelation 14 September 2005 John Carstens, location: in front of the Husum Castle with views towards the Kavaliershaus.

The impact that Ferdinand Tönnies left on sociology was the division of groups unconsciously and consciously. His contribution to sociology included fundamental dichotomy, community and society—where structural forms are being made through social life. He separates the idea that individual consciousness vs community consciousness by indicating that community is built through beliefs and society is built through power and a separation of classes.[citation needed]

Published works (selection) edit

  • 1887: Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft, Leipzig: Fues's Verlag, 2nd ed. 1912, 8th edition, Leipzig: Buske, 1935 (reprint 2005, Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft; latest edition: Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft. 1880–1935., hrsg. v. Bettina Clausen und Dieter Haselbach, De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston 2019 = Ferdinand Tönnies Gesamtausgabe, Band 2); his basic and never essentially changed study of social man; translated in 1957 as "Community and Society", ISBN 0-88738-750-0
  • 1896: Hobbes. Leben und Lehre, Stuttgart: Frommann, 1896, 3rd edn 1925; a philosophical study that reveals his indebtedness to Hobbes, many of whose writings he has edited
  • 1897: Der Nietzsche-Kultus (transl.The Nietzsche Cult), Leipzig: Reisland
  • 1905: "The Present Problems of Social Structure", in: American Journal of Sociology, 10(5), p. 569–588 (newly edited, with annotations, in: Ferdinand Tönnies Gesamtausgabe, tom. 7, Berlin/New York: Walter de Gruyter 2009, p. 269–285)
  • 1906: Philosophische Terminologie in psychologischer Ansicht, Leipzig: Thomas
  • 1907: Die Entwicklung der sozialen Frage, Leipzig: Göschen
  • 1909: Die Sitte, Frankfurt on Main: Rütten & Loening
  • 1915: Warlike England as seen by herself, New York: Dillingham [1]
  • 1917: Der englische Staat und der deutsche Staat, Berlin: Curius; pioneering political sociology
  • 1921: Marx. Leben und Lehre, Jena: Lichtenstein
  • 1922: Kritik der öffentlichen Meinung, Berlin: Springer; 2nd ed. 2003, Berlin/New York: Walter de Gruyter (Ferdinand Tönnies Gesamtausgabe, tom. 14); translated as On Public Opinion. Applied sociology revealing Tönnies' thorough scholarship and his commitment as an analyst and critic of modern public opinion
  • 1924, 1926, and 1929: Soziologische Studien und Kritiken, 3 vols, Jena: Fischer, a collection in three volumes of those papers he considered most relevant
  • 1925, Tönnies, F. Einteilung der Soziologie. Zeitschrift Für Die Gesamte Staatswissenschaft. English translation: Classification of Sociology. Journal of the Complete Political Science/ Institutional and Theoretical Economics, 79(1), 1–15. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/40744384
  • 1926: Fortschritt und soziale Entwicklung, Karlsruhe: Braun
  • 1927: Der Selbstmord in Schleswig-Holstein, Breslau: Hirt
  • 1931: Einführung in die Soziologie, Stuttgart: Enke. His fully elaborated introduction into sociology as a social science (latest edition Ferdinand Tönnies Gesamtausgabe Band 21, herausgegeben von Dieter Haselbach, De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston 2021, ISBN 978-3-11-015853-3).
  • 1935: Geist der Neuzeit, Leipzig: Buske; 2nd ed. 1998 (in: Ferdinand Tönnies Gesamtausgabe, tom. 22); a study in applied sociology, analysing the transformation from European Middle Ages to modern times
  • 1971: On Sociology: Pure, Applied, and Empirical. Selected writings edited and with an introd. by Werner J. Cahnman and Rudolf Heberle. The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-80607-3
  • 1974: On Social Ideas and Ideologies. Edited, Translated, and Annotated by E. G. Jacoby, Harper & Row
  • 1998–: Tönnies' Complete Works (Ferdinand Tönnies Gesamtausgabe), 24 vols., critically edited by Lars Clausen, Alexander Deichsel, Cornelius Bickel, Rolf Fechner (until 2006), Carsten Schlüter-Knauer, and Uwe Carstens (2006– ), Berlin/New York: Walter de Gruyter (1998– )
  • Materialien der Ferdinand-Tönnies-Arbeitsstelle am Institut für Technik- und Wissenschaftsforschung der Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt, edited by Arno Bammé:
    • 2008: Soziologische Schriften 1891–1905, ed. Rolf Fechner, Munich/Vienna: Profil
    • 2009: Schriften und Rezensionen zur Anthropologie, ed. Rolf Fechner, Munich/Vienna: Profil
    • 2009: Schriften zu Friedrich von Schiller, ed. Rolf Fechner, Munich/Vienna: Profil
    • 2010: Schriften und Rezensionen zur Religion, ed. Rolf Fechner, Profil, Munich/Vienna: Profil
    • 2010: Geist der Neuzeit, ed. Rolf Fechner, Profil-Verlag, Munich/Vienna: Profil
    • 2010: Schriften zur Staatswissenschaft, ed. Rolf Fechner, Profil, Munich/Vienna: Profil
    • 2011: Schriften zum Hamburger Hafenarbeiterstreik, ed. Rolf Fechner, Munich/Vienna: Profl

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "DGS – Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie: Vorsitzende der DGS". soziologie.de. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b Adair-Toteff, Christopher (1995). "Ferdinand Tonnies: Utopian Visionary". Sociological Theory. 13 (1): 58–65. doi:10.2307/202006. JSTOR 202006.
  3. ^ De Jove Ammone questionum specimen, Phil. Diss., Tübingen 1877
  4. ^ Ferdinand Tönnies: Hafenarbeiter und Seeleute in Hamburg vor dem Strike 1896/97, in: Archiv für soziale Gesetzgebung und Statistik, 1897, vol. 10/2, p. 173-238
  5. ^ See Uwe Carsten, Ferdinand Tönnies: Friese und Weltbürger, Norderstedt 2005, p. 287–299.
  6. ^ Bond, Niall (2013). "Ferdinand Tönnies' appraisal of Karl Marx: Debts and distance". Journal of Classical Sociology. 13 (1): 136–162. doi:10.1177/1468795X12474060. ISSN 1468-795X. S2CID 146935757.
  7. ^ Kritik der öffentlichen Meinung, [1922], in: Ferdinand Tönnies Gesamtausgabe, tom. 14, ed. Alexander Deichsel/Rolf Fechner/Rainer Waßner, de Gruyter, Berlin/New York 2002
  8. ^ Cf. Der Selbstmord von Maennern in Preussen, [Mens en Maatschappij, 1933], in: Ferdinand Tönnies Gesamtausgabe, tom. 22, ed. Lars Clausen, de Gruyter, Berlin/New York 1998, p. 357-380.
  9. ^ Lars Clausen: Ferdinand Tönnies (1855–1936), in: Christiana Albertina, No. 63, Kiel 2006, p. 663-69
  10. ^ Heberle, Rudolf (1937). "The Sociology of Ferdinand Tönnies". American Sociological Review. 2 (1): 9–25. doi:10.2307/2084562. ISSN 0003-1224. JSTOR 2084562.
  11. ^ a b c d Stafford, William (September 1995). "Ferdinand Tönnies on Gender, Women and the Family". History of Political Thought. 16: 391 – via EBSCOhost.
  12. ^ Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft, Leipzig 1887, §§ 1–40

References edit

  • Adair-Toteff, C., Ferdinand Tönnies: Utopian Visionar, in: Sociological Theory, vol. 13, 1996, p. 58–65
  • Bickel, Cornelius: Ferdinand Tönnies: Soziologie als skeptische Aufklärung zwischen Historismus und Rationalismus, Opladen: Westdt. Verlag, 1991.
  • Bond, Niall, "Ferdinand Tönnies's Romanticism," The European Legacy, 16.4 (2011), 487–504.
  • Bond, N. "Ferdinand Tönnies' Appraisal of Karl Marx: Debts and Distance." Journal of Classical Sociology, vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 136–162.
  • Braeman, John. "Ferdinand Julius Tönnies." Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia, 2021.
  • Cahnman, Werner J. (ed.), Ferdinand Tönnies: A New Evaluation, Leiden, Brill, 1973.
  • Cahnman, Werner J., Weber and Toennies: Comparative Sociology in Historical Perspective. New Brunswick: Transaction, 1995.
  • Cahnman, Werner J./Heberle, Rudolf: Ferdinand Toennies on Sociology: Pure, Applied and Empirical, 1971.
  • Carstens, Uwe: Ferdinand Tönnies: Friese und Weltbürger, Norderstedt: Books on Demand 2005, ISBN 3-8334-2966-6 [Biography, German]
  • Clausen, Lars: The European Revival of Tönnies, in: Cornelius Bickel/Lars Clausen, Tönnies in Toronto, C.A.U.S.A. 26 (Christian-Albrechts-Universität • Soziologische Arbeitsberichte), Kiel 1998, p. 1–11
  • Clausen, Lars: Tönnies, Ferdinand, in: Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopädie, tom. X, Munich: K. G. Saur 2008, p. 60–62 [German]
  • Clausen, Lars/Schlüter, Carsten (eds.): Hundert Jahre "Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft", Opladen: Leske + Budrich 1991 [German]
  • Deflem, Mathieu, "Ferdinand Tönnies on Crime and Society: An Unexplored Contribution to Criminological Sociology." History of the Human Sciences 12(3):87–116, 1999.
  • Deflem, Mathieu, "Ferdinand Tönnies (1855–1936)." In the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Online, edited by Edward Craig. London: Routledge, 2001.
  • Fechner, Rolf: Ferdinand Tönnies – Werkverzeichnis, Berlin/New York (Walter de Gruyter) 1992, ISBN 3-11-013519-1 [Bibliography, German]
  • Fechner, Rolf: Ferdinand Tönnies (1855–1936), in: Handbuch der Politischen Philosophie und Sozialphilosophie, Berlin/New York: Walter de Gruyter 2008, ISBN 978-3-11-017408-3, p. 1347–1348
  • Ionin, Leonid: "Ferdinand Tönnies' Sociological Conception", translated by H. Campbell Creighton, in: Igor Kon (ed.), A History of Classical Sociology (pp. 173–188). Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1989.
  • Jacoby, Eduard Georg: Die moderne Gesellschaft im sozialwissenschaftlichen Denken von Ferdinand Tönnies, Stuttgart: Enke 1971 [German]
  • Merz-Benz, Peter-Ulrich: Tiefsinn und Scharfsinn: Ferdinand Tönnies' begriffliche Konstitution der Sozialwelt, Frankfurt on Main 1995 (same year: Amalfi Prize) [German]
  • Podoksik, Efraim: Overcoming the Conservative Disposition: Oakeshott vs. Tönnies. Political Studies 56(4):857–880, 2008.
  • Stafford, William. "Ferdinand Tonnies on Gender, Women and the Family." History of Political Thought, vol. 16, no. 3, Sept. 1995, p. 391.
  • Tönnies, Ferdinand. Tönnies: Community and Civil Society : Community and Civil Society, edited by Jose Harris, Cambridge University Press, 2001.
  • External links
  • Ferdinand Tönnies: Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft – Abhandlung des Communismus und des Sozialismus als empirischer Kulturforment at the Internet Archive
  • Ferdinand Tönnies: Hobbes Leben und Lehre at the Internet Archive
  • Ferdinand Tönnies: Philosophische Terminologie in psychologisch-soziologischer Ansicht at the Internet Archive
  • Ferdinand Tönnies: Englische Weltpolitik in englischer Beleuchtung at the Internet Archive
  • Ferdinand-Tönnies-Gesellschaft
  • Newspaper clippings about Ferdinand Tönnies in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
  • Famous Scholars from Kiel: Ferdinand Tönnies

ferdinand, tönnies, german, ˈtœniːs, july, 1855, april, 1936, german, sociologist, economist, philosopher, significant, contributor, sociological, theory, field, studies, best, known, distinguishing, between, types, social, groups, gemeinschaft, gesellschaft, . Ferdinand Tonnies German ˈtœniːs 26 July 1855 9 April 1936 was a German sociologist economist and philosopher He was a significant contributor to sociological theory and field studies best known for distinguishing between two types of social groups Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft community and society He co founded the German Society for Sociology together with Max Weber and Georg Simmel and many other founders He was president of the society from 1909 to 1933 1 after which he was ousted for having criticized the Nazis Tonnies was regarded as the first proper German sociologist and published over 900 works contributing to many areas of sociology and philosophy Tonnies Max Weber and Georg Simmel are considered the founding fathers of classical German sociology Though there has been a resurgence of interest in Weber and Simmel Tonnies has not drawn as much attention 2 Ferdinand TonniesTonnies c 1915Born 1855 07 26 26 July 1855Oldenswort Duchy of Schleswig DenmarkDied9 April 1936 1936 04 09 aged 80 Kiel Nazi GermanyNationalityGermanAlma materUniversity of JenaUniversity of BonnUniversity of LeipzigUniversity of Berlin University of TubingenKnown forSociological Theory distinction between two types of social groups Gemeinschaft and GesellschaftScientific careerFieldsSociologyInstitutionsUniversity of Kiel Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Education and academic career 1 3 Sociological contributions 2 Chronological timeline of life and career 3 Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft 4 Criticisms 5 Impact 6 Published works selection 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesBiography editEarly life edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Ferdinand Tonnies was born on 26 July 1855 on the Haubarg De Reap Oldenswort on the Eiderstedt Peninsula into a wealthy farmer s family in North Frisia Schleswig then under Danish rule Tonnies was the only sociologist of his generation who came from the countryside He was the third child of church chief and farmer August Ferdinand Tonnies 1822 1883 and his wife Ida Frederica born Mau 1826 1915 came from a theological family from East Holstein His father of Frisian ancestry was a successful farmer and cattle rancher while his mother hailed from a line of Lutheran ministers The two had seven children four sons and three daughters On the day he was born Ferdinand Tonnies received the baptismal name of Ferdinand Julius and moved to Husum on the North Sea after his father retired in 1864 Education and academic career edit Tonnies enrolled at the University of Strasbourg after graduating from high school in 1872 They took the time to utilize his freedom to travel exploring the academic fields of the University of Jena Bonn Leipzig Berlin and Tubingen At age 22 he received a doctorate in philology at the University of Tubingen in 1877 with a Latin thesis on the ancient Siwa Oasis 3 However by this time his main interests had switched to political philosophy and social issues After completing postdoctoral work at the University of Berlin he traveled to London to continue his studies on the seventeenth century English political thinker Thomas Hobbes Tonnies earned a Privatdozent in philosophy at the University of Kiel from 1909 to 1933 after submitting a draft of his major book Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft as his Habilitationsschrift in 1881 He held this post at the University of Kiel for only three years Because he sympathized with the Hamburg dockers strike of 1896 4 the conservative Prussian government considered him to be a social democrat and Tonnies would not be called to a professorial chair until 1913 He returned to Kiel as a professor emeritus in 1921 where he took on a teaching position in sociology and taught until 1933 when he was ousted by the Nazis due to earlier publications in which he had criticized them and had endorsed the Social Democratic Party 5 6 Remaining in Kiel he died three years later in isolation in his home in 1936 Sociological contributions edit Many of his writings on sociological theories furthered pure sociology including Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft 1887 He coined the metaphysical term Voluntarism Tonnies also contributed to the study of social change particularly on public opinion 7 customs and technology crime and suicide 8 He also had a vivid interest in methodology especially statistics and sociological research inventing his own technique of statistical association 9 After publishing Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft Tonnies focused aspects of the social life such as morals folkways and public opinion However he is best known for his published work on Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft because his later works applied the same concepts to aspects of social life 10 Chronological timeline of life and career edit1855 Born 26 July Oldenswort in the Duchy of Schleswig 1864 Prusso Austrian invasion and absorption of Schleswig Holstein into Prussia after contest with Denmark 1865 Tonnies family moved to Husum where his father took up merchant banking 1867 Tonnies entered the local grammar school studied Greek Latin and German classical literature 1870 Franco Prussian War creation of German empire Tonnies met Schleswegian poet and folk hero Theodor Storm who became a life long influence 1871 7 Studied at the universities of Strasbourg Jena Leipzig Berlin Kiel and Tubingen Gained doctorate in Greek philology at Tubingen Became a close friend of Friedrich Paulsen an admirer of Kant Lassalle and Hobbes 1878 First visit to England Worked on Hobbes manuscripts at the British Museum Oxford and Hardwick 1879 81 Published Remarks on the Philosophy of Thomas Hobbes in Vierteljahrsschrift fur wissenschaftliche Philosophie Quarterly Journal of Scientific Philosophy 1881 An early version of Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft submitted as his Habilitationsschrift at University of Kiel 1887 First edition of Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft Abhandlung des Communismus und des Socialismus als empirischer Culturformen Community and Society An Essay on Communism and Socialism as Historical Social System 1889 After prolonged delay Tonnies editions of Hobbes Elements of Law Natural and Politic and Behemoth published in English 1890 Failed to obtain a university professorship became a Privatdozent at Kiel 1892 Helped found Society for Ethical Culture the vehicle for his life long involvement in various co operative social reform and self improvement movements 1893 Offered a university chair on condition that he gave up Society for Ethical Culture which he refused 1894 Marriage to Marie Sieck daughter of a Protestant minister from the Schleswegian town of Eutin Five children born over the next ten years 1896 First edition of Thomas Hobbes Leben und Lehre Thomas Hobbes Life and Work Tonnies support for Hamburg dock strike compounds his difficulties in gaining a university chair 1899 1900 Tonnies prize essay on Philosophical Terminology published in an English translation by Helen Bosanquet in Mind 1904 Visited America for International Arts and Sciences Congress at St Louis Contacts with sociologists of the Chicago School sociology 1908 House guest of Max and Marianne Weber during the International Philosophy Congress at Heidelberg 1909 First edition of his book on Die Sitte Custom With Max Weber and Georg Simmel founding member of the German Society for Sociology Tonnies would be president of this body for most of his life 1912 Second edition with new subtitle of Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft Grundbegriffe der reinen Soziologie Community and Society Basic Concepts in Pure Sociology and of Tonnies study of Hobbes 1913 Secures his first permanent chair a professorship of economic political science at the university of Kiel 1917 Publication of Der englische Staat und der deutsche Staat The English State and the German State 1920 Third edition of Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft 1921 Publication of Marx Leben und Lehre Marx Life and Work 1922 Publication of Kritik der offentlichen Meinung Critique of Public Opinion 1923 Autobiographical sketch published in Die Philosophie der Gegenwart in Selbstdarstellung The Philosophy of the Present in Self Representation 1925 Tonnies s major writings collected in Soziologische Studien und Kritiken Sociological Studies and Critiques Third edition of book on Thomas Hobbes 1931 Publication of Einfuhrung in die Soziologie Introduction to Sociology 1932 Joined the Social Democratic party to support resistance to the rise of fascism 1933 Adolf Hitler becomes chancellor of Germany Tonnies stripped of his honorary professorship at Kiel academic pension and personal library by local Nazi administration 1935 A major conference at Leipzig in honour of Tonnies s eightieth birthday Eighth edition of Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft Publication of his final work Geist der Neuzeit Spirit of Modern Times 1936 Death of Tonnies 2000 Josie Klaus Heberle Tonnies great great grandchild was born in Jeffersonville IN Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft editMain article Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft Tonnies distinguished between two types of social groupings Gemeinschaft often translated as community or left untranslated refers to groups based on feelings of togetherness and mutual bonds which are felt like a goal to be kept up their members being means for this goal Gesellschaft often translated as society on the other hand refers to groups that are sustained by it being instrumental for their members aims and goals The equilibrium in Gemeinschaft is achieved through means of social control such as morals conformism and exclusion while Gesellschaft keeps its balance through police laws tribunals and prisons Amish and Hasidic communities are examples of Gemeinschaft while states are types of Gesellschaft Rules in Gemeinschaft are implicit while Gesellschaft has explicit rules written laws Gemeinschaft may be exemplified historically by a family or a neighborhood in a pre modern rural society Gesellschaft by a joint stock company or a state in a modern society i e the society when Tonnies lived Gesellschaft relationships arose in an urban and capitalist setting characterized by individualism and impersonal monetary connections between people Social ties were often instrumental and superficial with self interest and exploitation increasingly the norm Examples are corporations states or voluntary associations In his book Einteilung der Soziologie Classification of Sociology he distinguished between three disciplines of sociology being Pure or Theoretical reine theoretische Sociology Applied angewandte Sociology and Empirical emprische Sociology His distinction between social groupings is based on the assumption that there are only two primary forms of an actor s will to approve of other men For Tonnies such approval is by no means self evident he is pretty influenced by Thomas Hobbes 2 Following his essential will Wesenwille an actor will see himself as a means to serve the goals of social grouping very often it is an underlying subconscious force Groupings formed around an essential will are called a Gemeinschaft The other will is the arbitrary will Kurwille An actor sees a social grouping as a means to further his individual goals so it is purposive and future oriented Groupings around the latter are called Gesellschaft Whereas the membership in a Gemeinschaft is self fulfilling a Gesellschaft is instrumental for its members In pure sociology theoretically these two standard types of will are to be strictly separated in applied sociology empirically they are always mixed Gender Polarity in Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft What is less well known when discussing the work of Tonnies is that he frequently uses gender concepts to explain his main ideas Essential will arbitrary will Gemeinschaft Gesellschaft are all thought of in terms of the polarity of feminine masculine Gemeinschaft for example is feminine the eternal feminine since motherliness is the basis of all being together Essential will is also feminine whereas Gesellschaft and arbitrary choice are masculine 11 Tonnies theory appears to consign him to a nineteenth century view of the public world belonging to males while women are relegated to the private realm as it links together Gemeinschaft home woman as opposed to Gesellschaft marketplace man Views on FamilyIn his article Funfzehn Thesen zur Erneuerung eines Familienlebens published in 1893 he claims that the dissolution of family life has tainted modern society s blood Tonnies believed that one of the most important ways to resurrect Gemeinschaft in the modern world would be to improve and prolong family life 11 The demise of the family is caused by modern capitalism and its consequences low pay excessive hours of labor for men and women alike and terrible living conditions He believes family life has to be revitalized since it is the foundation of all culture and morals 11 In this case he proposed two solutions that revolved around the idea of unions devoted to aid and nurture as he would claim the family spirit Two Solutions The first would be groupings of organically linked families who in order to strengthen family life would preserve family documents correspond regularly gather at family festivals and assist one another by pooling resources A family fund would be set up to help those who had fallen on hard times or who required money to develop unique skills The second version would bring together unrelated families and be dedicated to a simpler and healthier way of life a more serious and reasonable method of social interaction and a better comprehension of masculine and feminine thought Three to five families would choose to band together to achieve these goals eventually they might live together in a common residence engage in cooperative purchasing and even share products Groups may eventually band together in order to gain greater economic and moral power 11 Criticisms editTonnies distinction between Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft like others between tradition and modernity has been criticized for over generalizing differences between societies and implying that all societies were following a similar evolutionary path an argument which Tonnies himself never actually proclaimed 12 Impact edit nbsp Memorial Bust of Ferdinand Tonnies Sculptor Raimund Kittl revelation 14 September 2005 John Carstens location in front of the Husum Castle with views towards the Kavaliershaus The impact that Ferdinand Tonnies left on sociology was the division of groups unconsciously and consciously His contribution to sociology included fundamental dichotomy community and society where structural forms are being made through social life He separates the idea that individual consciousness vs community consciousness by indicating that community is built through beliefs and society is built through power and a separation of classes citation needed Published works selection edit1887 Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft Leipzig Fues s Verlag 2nd ed 1912 8th edition Leipzig Buske 1935 reprint 2005 Darmstadt Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft latest edition Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft 1880 1935 hrsg v Bettina Clausen und Dieter Haselbach De Gruyter Berlin Boston 2019 Ferdinand Tonnies Gesamtausgabe Band 2 his basic and never essentially changed study of social man translated in 1957 as Community and Society ISBN 0 88738 750 0 1896 Hobbes Leben und Lehre Stuttgart Frommann 1896 3rd edn 1925 a philosophical study that reveals his indebtedness to Hobbes many of whose writings he has edited 1897 Der Nietzsche Kultus transl The Nietzsche Cult Leipzig Reisland 1905 The Present Problems of Social Structure in American Journal of Sociology 10 5 p 569 588 newly edited with annotations in Ferdinand Tonnies Gesamtausgabe tom 7 Berlin New York Walter de Gruyter 2009 p 269 285 1906 Philosophische Terminologie in psychologischer Ansicht Leipzig Thomas 1907 Die Entwicklung der sozialen Frage Leipzig Goschen 1909 Die Sitte Frankfurt on Main Rutten amp Loening 1915 Warlike England as seen by herself New York Dillingham 1 1917 Der englische Staat und der deutsche Staat Berlin Curius pioneering political sociology 1921 Marx Leben und Lehre Jena Lichtenstein 1922 Kritik der offentlichen Meinung Berlin Springer 2nd ed 2003 Berlin New York Walter de Gruyter Ferdinand Tonnies Gesamtausgabe tom 14 translated as On Public Opinion Applied sociology revealing Tonnies thorough scholarship and his commitment as an analyst and critic of modern public opinion 1924 1926 and 1929 Soziologische Studien und Kritiken 3 vols Jena Fischer a collection in three volumes of those papers he considered most relevant 1925 Tonnies F Einteilung der Soziologie Zeitschrift Fur Die Gesamte Staatswissenschaft English translation Classification of Sociology Journal of the Complete Political Science Institutional and Theoretical Economics 79 1 1 15 Retrieved from http www jstor org stable 40744384 1926 Fortschritt und soziale Entwicklung Karlsruhe Braun 1927 Der Selbstmord in Schleswig Holstein Breslau Hirt 1931 Einfuhrung in die Soziologie Stuttgart Enke His fully elaborated introduction into sociology as a social science latest edition Ferdinand Tonnies Gesamtausgabe Band 21 herausgegeben von Dieter Haselbach De Gruyter Berlin Boston 2021 ISBN 978 3 11 015853 3 1935 Geist der Neuzeit Leipzig Buske 2nd ed 1998 in Ferdinand Tonnies Gesamtausgabe tom 22 a study in applied sociology analysing the transformation from European Middle Ages to modern times 1971 On Sociology Pure Applied and Empirical Selected writings edited and with an introd by Werner J Cahnman and Rudolf Heberle The University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 80607 3 1974 On Social Ideas and Ideologies Edited Translated and Annotated by E G Jacoby Harper amp Row 1998 Tonnies Complete Works Ferdinand Tonnies Gesamtausgabe 24 vols critically edited by Lars Clausen Alexander Deichsel Cornelius Bickel Rolf Fechner until 2006 Carsten Schluter Knauer and Uwe Carstens 2006 Berlin New York Walter de Gruyter 1998 Materialien der Ferdinand Tonnies Arbeitsstelle am Institut fur Technik und Wissenschaftsforschung der Alpen Adria Universitat Klagenfurt edited by Arno Bamme 2008 Soziologische Schriften 1891 1905 ed Rolf Fechner Munich Vienna Profil 2009 Schriften und Rezensionen zur Anthropologie ed Rolf Fechner Munich Vienna Profil 2009 Schriften zu Friedrich von Schiller ed Rolf Fechner Munich Vienna Profil 2010 Schriften und Rezensionen zur Religion ed Rolf Fechner Profil Munich Vienna Profil 2010 Geist der Neuzeit ed Rolf Fechner Profil Verlag Munich Vienna Profil 2010 Schriften zur Staatswissenschaft ed Rolf Fechner Profil Munich Vienna Profil 2011 Schriften zum Hamburger Hafenarbeiterstreik ed Rolf Fechner Munich Vienna ProflSee also editFerdinand Tonnies Society Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft Max WeberNotes edit DGS Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Soziologie Vorsitzende der DGS soziologie de Retrieved 8 March 2021 a b Adair Toteff Christopher 1995 Ferdinand Tonnies Utopian Visionary Sociological Theory 13 1 58 65 doi 10 2307 202006 JSTOR 202006 De Jove Ammone questionum specimen Phil Diss Tubingen 1877 Ferdinand Tonnies Hafenarbeiter und Seeleute in Hamburg vor dem Strike 1896 97 in Archiv fur soziale Gesetzgebung und Statistik 1897 vol 10 2 p 173 238 See Uwe Carsten Ferdinand Tonnies Friese und Weltburger Norderstedt 2005 p 287 299 Bond Niall 2013 Ferdinand Tonnies appraisal of Karl Marx Debts and distance Journal of Classical Sociology 13 1 136 162 doi 10 1177 1468795X12474060 ISSN 1468 795X S2CID 146935757 Kritik der offentlichen Meinung 1922 in Ferdinand Tonnies Gesamtausgabe tom 14 ed Alexander Deichsel Rolf Fechner Rainer Wassner de Gruyter Berlin New York 2002 Cf Der Selbstmord von Maennern in Preussen Mens en Maatschappij 1933 in Ferdinand Tonnies Gesamtausgabe tom 22 ed Lars Clausen de Gruyter Berlin New York 1998 p 357 380 Lars Clausen Ferdinand Tonnies 1855 1936 in Christiana Albertina No 63 Kiel 2006 p 663 69 Heberle Rudolf 1937 The Sociology of Ferdinand Tonnies American Sociological Review 2 1 9 25 doi 10 2307 2084562 ISSN 0003 1224 JSTOR 2084562 a b c d Stafford William September 1995 Ferdinand Tonnies on Gender Women and the Family History of Political Thought 16 391 via EBSCOhost Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft Leipzig 1887 1 40References editAdair Toteff C Ferdinand Tonnies Utopian Visionar in Sociological Theory vol 13 1996 p 58 65 Bickel Cornelius Ferdinand Tonnies Soziologie als skeptische Aufklarung zwischen Historismus und Rationalismus Opladen Westdt Verlag 1991 Bond Niall Ferdinand Tonnies s Romanticism The European Legacy 16 4 2011 487 504 Bond N Ferdinand Tonnies Appraisal of Karl Marx Debts and Distance Journal of Classical Sociology vol 13 no 1 pp 136 162 Braeman John Ferdinand Julius Tonnies Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia 2021 Cahnman Werner J ed Ferdinand Tonnies A New Evaluation Leiden Brill 1973 Cahnman Werner J Weber and Toennies Comparative Sociology in Historical Perspective New Brunswick Transaction 1995 Cahnman Werner J Heberle Rudolf Ferdinand Toennies on Sociology Pure Applied and Empirical 1971 Carstens Uwe Ferdinand Tonnies Friese und Weltburger Norderstedt Books on Demand 2005 ISBN 3 8334 2966 6 Biography German Clausen Lars The European Revival of Tonnies in Cornelius Bickel Lars Clausen Tonnies in Toronto C A U S A 26 Christian Albrechts Universitat Soziologische Arbeitsberichte Kiel 1998 p 1 11 Clausen Lars Tonnies Ferdinand in Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopadie tom X Munich K G Saur 2008 p 60 62 German Clausen Lars Schluter Carsten eds Hundert Jahre Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft Opladen Leske Budrich 1991 German Deflem Mathieu Ferdinand Tonnies on Crime and Society An Unexplored Contribution to Criminological Sociology History of the Human Sciences 12 3 87 116 1999 Deflem Mathieu Ferdinand Tonnies 1855 1936 In the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Online edited by Edward Craig London Routledge 2001 Fechner Rolf Ferdinand Tonnies Werkverzeichnis Berlin New York Walter de Gruyter 1992 ISBN 3 11 013519 1 Bibliography German Fechner Rolf Ferdinand Tonnies 1855 1936 in Handbuch der Politischen Philosophie und Sozialphilosophie Berlin New York Walter de Gruyter 2008 ISBN 978 3 11 017408 3 p 1347 1348 Ionin Leonid Ferdinand Tonnies Sociological Conception translated by H Campbell Creighton in Igor Kon ed A History of Classical Sociology pp 173 188 Moscow Progress Publishers 1989 Jacoby Eduard Georg Die moderne Gesellschaft im sozialwissenschaftlichen Denken von Ferdinand Tonnies Stuttgart Enke 1971 German Merz Benz Peter Ulrich Tiefsinn und Scharfsinn Ferdinand Tonnies begriffliche Konstitution der Sozialwelt Frankfurt on Main 1995 same year Amalfi Prize German Podoksik Efraim Overcoming the Conservative Disposition Oakeshott vs Tonnies Political Studies 56 4 857 880 2008 Stafford William Ferdinand Tonnies on Gender Women and the Family History of Political Thought vol 16 no 3 Sept 1995 p 391 Tonnies Ferdinand Tonnies Community and Civil Society Community and Civil Society edited by Jose Harris Cambridge University Press 2001 External links Ferdinand Tonnies Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft Abhandlung des Communismus und des Sozialismus als empirischer Kulturforment at the Internet Archive Ferdinand Tonnies Hobbes Leben und Lehre at the Internet Archive Ferdinand Tonnies Philosophische Terminologie in psychologisch soziologischer Ansicht at the Internet Archive Ferdinand Tonnies Englische Weltpolitik in englischer Beleuchtung at the Internet Archive Ferdinand Tonnies Gesellschaft Newspaper clippings about Ferdinand Tonnies in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Famous Scholars from Kiel Ferdinand Tonnies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ferdinand Tonnies amp oldid 1212046719, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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