Dictionary Definition
anomie
Noun
1 personal state of isolation and anxiety
resulting from a lack of social control and regulation [syn:
anomy]
2 lack of moral standards in a society [syn:
anomy]
User Contributed Dictionary
Etymology
From Greek, via French; Greek ανομια (anomiā) ‘lawlessness’ from ανομος (anomos) ‘lawless’ from a- ‘without’ + νομος (nomos) ‘law’ from Indo-European root nem-.Noun
- Alienation or social instability caused by erosion of standards and values.
Derived terms
Translations
Extensive Definition
Anomie, in contemporary English,
means a condition of malaise in individuals,
characterized by an absence or diminution of standards or values.
When applied to a government or society, anomie implies a social
unrest or chaos.
Etymology
The word comes from Greek,
namely the prefix
a- “without”, and nomos “law”. The Greeks distinguished between
nomos (νόμος, “law”), and arché (αρχή, “starting rule, axiom,
principle”). For example, a monarch is a single ruler but he
or she might still be subject to, and not exempt from, the
prevailing laws, i.e. nomos.
In the original city state
democracy, the
majority
rule was an aspect of arché because it was a rule-based,
customary system which might or might not make laws, i.e. nomos.
Thus, the original meaning of anomie defined anything or anyone
against or outside the law, or a condition where the current laws
were not applied resulting in a state of illegitimacy or
lawlessness.
The contemporary English understanding of the
word anomie can accept greater flexibility in the word “norm”,
and some have used the idea of normlessness to reflect a
similar situation to the idea of anarchy. But, as
used by Émile
Durkheim and later theorists, anomie is a reaction against or a
retreat from the regulatory social
controls of society,
and is a completely separate concept from anarchy which is an
absence of effective rulers or leaders.
Anomie as social disorder
The nineteenth
century French pioneer
sociologist Emile
Durkheim borrowed the word from French philosopher Jean-Marie
Guyau and used it in his influential book Suicide
(1897), outlining the social (and not individual)
causes of suicide,
characterized by an absence or diminution of standards or values
(referred to as normlessness), and an associated feeling of
alienation
and purposelessness. He
believed that anomie is common when the surrounding society has
undergone significant changes in its economic fortunes, whether for
good or for worse and, more generally, when there is a significant
discrepancy between the ideological theories and values commonly
professed and what was actually achievable in everyday life. This
is contrary to previous theories on suicide which generally
maintained that suicide was precipitated by negative events in a
person's life and their subsequent depression.
In Durkheim’s view, traditional religions often provided the
basis for the shared values which the anomic individual lacks.
Furthermore, he argued that the division
of labor that had been prevalent in economic life since the
Industrial
Revolution led individuals to pursue egoistic ends rather than seeking
the good of a larger community.
Robert
King Merton also adopted the idea of anomie to develop Strain
Theory, defining it as the discrepancy between common social
goals and the legitimate means to attain those goals. In other
words, an individual suffering from anomie would strive to attain
the common goals of a specific society yet would not be able to
reach these goals legitimately because of the structural limitations in
society. As a result the individual would exhibit deviant
behavior. Friedrich
Hayek notably uses the word anomie with this meaning.
Anomie as a social disorder is not to be confused
with anarchy. Anarchy denotes lack of rulers, hierarchy, and
command, whereas anomie denotes lack of rules, structure, and
organization. Many proponents of anarchism claim that anarchy
does not necessarily lead to anomie and that hierarchical command
actually increases lawlessness (see e.g. the
Law of Eristic Escalation).
As an older variant, the Webster 1913
dictionary reports use of the word anomie as meaning “disregard or
violation of the law”.
Anomie in literature and film and theatre
In Albert
Camus’s existentialist novel The
Stranger, the protagonist Meursault
struggles to construct an individual system of values as he
responds to the disappearance of the old. He exists largely in a
state of anomie, as seen from the apathy evinced in the opening
lines: (“Today mother died. Or maybe yesterday, I don't
know.”)
Dostoevsky,
whose work is often considered a philosophical precursor to
existentialism,
often expressed a similar concern in his novels. In The
Brothers Karamazov, the character
Dmitri Karamazov asks his atheist friend Rakitin,
”...without God and immortal life? All things are lawful then, they
can do what they like?” Raskolnikov,
the anti-hero of
Dostoevsky’s novel Crime
and Punishment, puts this philosophy into action when he kills
an elderly pawnbroker and her sister, later rationalizing this act
to himself with the words, “...it wasn’t a human being I killed, it
was a principle!”
Hermann
Hesse’s Der
Steppenwolf also expresses a very clear picture of anomie. The
protagonist affirms that the men of the Dark Ages did
not suffer more than those of the Classical
Antiquity, and vice-versa. It is rather those who live between
two times, those who do not know what to follow, that suffer the
most. In this token, a man from the Dark Ages living in the
Classical Antiquity, or the opposite, would undergo a gulping
sadness and agony.
The characters Vladimir and Estragon in Samuel
Beckett's play Waiting
For Godot have been seen to express anomie.
Bibliography
- Marco Orru, The Ethics of Anomie: Jean Marie Guyau and Emile Durkheim, British Journal of Sociology, Vol. 34, No. 4 (Dec., 1983), pp. 499-518
- Jordi Riba, La morale anomique de Jean-Marie Guyau, Paris [etc.] : L'Harmattan, 1999
See Also
anomie in Bosnian: Anomija
anomie in Czech: Anomie
anomie in German: Anomie
anomie in Estonian: Anoomia
anomie in Spanish: Anomia (ciencias
sociales)
anomie in French: Anomie
anomie in Indonesian: Anomie
anomie in Italian: Anomia
anomie in Hebrew: אנומיה
anomie in Kazakh: Аномия
anomie in Dutch: Anomie
anomie in Polish: Anomia (stan społeczny)
anomie in Portuguese: Anomia
anomie in Simple English: Anomie
anomie in Serbian: Аномија
anomie in Finnish: Anomia
anomie in Ukrainian: Аномія