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Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft
(redirected from Gemeinschaft)

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Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft

German terms (roughly, ‘community’ and ‘association’) coined by Ferdinand Tönnies in 1887 to contrast social relationships in traditional rural societies with those in modern industrial societies. He saw Gemeinschaft (traditional) as intimate and positive, and Gesellschaft (modern) as impersonal and negative.

In small-scale societies where everyone knows everyone else, the social order is seen as stable and the culture as homogeneous. In large urban areas life is faster and more competitive, and relationships are seen as more superficial, transitory, and anonymous.



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The shutdown was devastating for BASF and the other companies of the German chemical industry's interessen gemeinschaft (literally, "community of interest"--i.
German sociologist, Ferdinand Tonnies, in 1887, first proposed the split between organic gemeinschaft (community), associated with family and neighborhood, and the more instrumental gesellschaft (society), associated with the city or state.
Communion" translates the German Gemeinschaft and refers to being bound together in relation; specifically, in the context of Loehe's liturgical work and writing, it encompasses both the relation to God and to others that is established at worship.
 
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