Georg Simmel ON INDIVIDUALITY AND SOCIAL FORMS THE HERITAGE OF SOCIOLOGY A Series Edited by Morris Janowitz Georg Simmel ON INDIVIDUALITY AND SOCIAL FORMS Selected Writings Edited and with an Introduction by DONALD N. LEVINE THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS CHICAGO AND LONDON The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637 The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London © 1971 by The University of Chicago All rights reserved. Published 1971 Printed in the United States ofAmerica 16 15 14 13 12 16 17 ISBN-13: 978-0-226-75776-6 (paper) ISBN-10: 0-226-75776-5 (paper) LCN: 78-157146 øThe paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials,ANSI Z39.48-1992. Contents ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Vll INTRODUCTION by Donald N. Levine ix I. PHILOSOPHY OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES 1 1. How Is History Possible? 3 2. How Is Society Possible? 6 3. The Problem of Sociology 23 4. The Categories of Human Experience 36 II. FORMS OF SOCIAL INTERACTION 41 5. Exchange 43 6. Conflict 70 7. Domination 96 8. Prostitution 121 9. Sociability 127 III. SOC I A L TYPES 141 10. The Stranger 143 11. The Poor 150 12. The Miser and the Spendthrift 179 13. The Adventurer 187 V vz CONTENTS 14. The Nobility 199 IV. FORMS OF INDIVIDUALITY 215 15. Freedom and the Individual 217 16. Subjective Culture 227 17. Eros, Platonic and Modern 235 V. INDIVIDUALITY AND SOCIAL STRUCTURE 249 18. Group Expansion and the Development of Individuality 251 19. Fashion 294 20. The Metropolis and Mental Life 324 21. Subordination and Personal Fulfillment 340 VI. FOR M S V E R SUS L I F E PRO C E S S : THE D I ALE C TIC S 0 F C HAN G E 349 22. Social Forms and Inner Needs 351 23. The Transcendent Character of Life 353 24. The Conflict in Modern Culture 375 395 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE Acknowledgments FOR HELPFUL COMMENTS on the introductory essay I am greatly indebted to Robert K. Merton and Lewis A. Coser. Mrs. Robert Redfield kindly provided materials for the section on Robert E. Park. Guenther Roth graciously made available a copy of the unpublished manuscript by Max Weber which is cited in the essay. A belated word of gratitude is due to Everett C. Hughes, whose seminar on Simmel in the mid-1950s helped confirm a young grad uate student's interest. vu Introduction Simmel as Innovator OF THOSE who created the intellectual capital used to launch the enterprise of professional sociology, Georg Simmel was perhaps the most original and fecund. In search of a subject matter for sociology that would distinguish it from all other social sci ences and humanistic disciplines, he charted a new field for dis covery and proceeded to explore a world of novel topics in works that have guided and anticipated the thinking of generations of sociologists. Such distinctive concepts of contemporary sociology as social distance, marginality, urbanism as a way of life, role playing, social behavior as exchange, conflict as an integrating process, dyadic encounter, circular interaction, reference groups as perspectives, and sociological ambivalence embody ideas which Simmel adumbrated more than six decades ago. These and kindred ideas represent only a fraction of Simmel's total intellectual out put, which also included lasting contributions to aesthetics, ethics, epistemology, metaphysics, and intellectual history. The period in which Simmel's mature works appeared was one of great cultural ferment. Central Europe from the turn of the century to World War I witnessed the birth of psychoanalysis, rela tivity theory, logical positivism, phenomenology, atonal music, and several milestones of literature and humanistic scholarship. Berlin of the period was a congenial setting for the cultivated style of life and thought which Simmel followed. Born there in 1858, he remained to study at the University of Berlin, where he subse quently spent most of his academic career lecturing. He moved, to Strasbourg, only at the age of fifty-six, four years before his death.
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