Dictionary Definition
elite adj : selected as the best; "an elect
circle of artists"; "elite colleges" [syn: elect] n : a group or class of
persons enjoying superior intellectual or social or economic status
[syn: elite
group]
User Contributed Dictionary
Translations
Noun
- A special group or social class of people which have a superior intellectual, social or economic status as, the elite of society.
- Someone who is
among the best at certain task.
- 1964, "France's
Culture Corps," Time, 7 Aug.,
- Is there a nobler or more disinterested aim than to educate the cadres, the elites of tomorrow?
- 1964, "France's
Culture Corps," Time, 7 Aug.,
Translations
group with higher status
Extensive Definition
Elite (also spelled Élite) is taken originally
from the Latin, eligere, "to
elect". In sociology
as in general usage, the élite is a relatively small dominant
group
within a large society, which enjoys a privileged status envied by
individuals of lower social status.
Religious elite
In religion the Latin form "elect"
is preferred over the French form "elite" in discussing Cathar or Calvinist
theology, for examples, and the social structure that is
theologically driven. Other religious groups may use expressions
like "the saints" to
describe the elect.
Perhaps the most globally recognized of all
religious elite reside in Rome: the Pope and the Vatican Assembly.
While it is true that the Pope is elected by the college of
Cardinals, the cardinals who vote for him are appointed by prior
papal decrees. The Pope is himself chosen from among the college of
Cardinals. Once elected, the Pope is in "office" for the remainder
of his life.
Linguistic elite
Some elite groups speak a language that is not
shared by the commonality: in Tsarist
Russia and in Vietnam the elite
spoke French, in the Philippines the
elite spoke, and in many cases still speak, Spanish. In Plantagenet
England the elite spoke Anglo-Norman,
while Finland
was ruled by a Swedish-speaking elite up to the beginning of the
20th century and in Ptolemaic
Egypt the elite spoke Koine Greek. In
ancient India Sanskrit was spoken by elite class. (See linguistic
imperialism.) Elites establish correct usage for the language
when they share one with the commonality. Elite usage is reflected
in "prescriptive"
dictionaries; common usage is reflected in "descriptive"
dictionaries. Elites establish cultural
canons, which are more widely agreed-upon within the elite and
more generally ignored or resented among the non-elite. In the
1950s, the British elite spoke what linguists of the time called
U
English.
Business elite
Elite advantages are the usual ones of a dominant
social
class: easier access to capital and political power,
more rigorous education largely free of
indoctrination,
resulting in cultural
influence, and leadership.
Elites may justify their existence based on
claims of inherited position; with the rise in authority of
science, certain 19th and 20th century elites have embraced
pseudoscientific
justifications of genetic
or
racial superiority. In Nazi
Germany, genetic superiority was used as the basis of an
imagined "Aryan" elite. Elite
classes headed by monarchies have
traditionally employed religious sanctions for their
position.
Meritocracy is
a facet of society that tries to promote merit as a route to the
elite. Societies such as that of the United
States have it in their culture to promote such a facet [see
Horatio
Alger]. However, while it tends to be imperfect it sheds light
as to what many believe to be the "ideal" elite: an elite that is
porous and whose members have earned their position as society's
top class.
Aristocracy and
oligarchy are social
systems which feature an elite as the ruling class. An elite group,
ranged round the alpha male, is
a distinct feature of other closely-related social primates.
Educational elite
Elites are educated to govern. While common public education is often designed to educate the general population to produce knowledgeable and skilled citizens, the elite approach to education is often presented at a more intellectual and demanding level, and is geared to produce leaders of a sort. It can be idealized as an education geared to producing an individual capable of thinking at an intellectual level more advanced than the general population, consisting of diverse philosophical ideals and theories in order to enable the elite to logically evaluate situations.However in some systems, such as that of the
Scholar-bureaucrats
that administered China for 1300 years, elite education is used to
select and skim off the most able students regardless of class or
financial background. In order to pass these Imperial
examinations, students had to be versed in the Confucian
classics and neo-Confucian commentaries, creating a cohesive and
socially homogeneous scholar-gentry. This co-opted into its
service those who would have potentially been the most dangerous to
the state and left would be malcontents either leaderless or those
it did have uneducated. As an avenue to political power, the
examination system became increasingly corrupted, with political
connections and loyalty to the regime becoming as important as
outright ability. The cultural legacy of this policy can still be
found in the
selection for the elite Chinese Universities to this day. Elite
universities, through a process of indoctrination of a common
heritage, ethos and promise of preferred advancement, create a
loyal administrative/ruling elite for the service of the state.
Such a system of selection for elite education can be seen even in
the Western tradition, for example in Napoleon's Grandes
écoles.
Financial elite
Financial elite refers to the wealthiest members of a society.Military
A military elite is a unit of soldiers or recruits picked for their competence and put in a special elite unit. Elite units enjoy some benefits as compared to other units, at least in the form of higher status, but often also higher pay and better equipment. Napoléon's Imperial Guard would be a good example. Note that the word elite in the military sense is fundamentally different from most other uses of the term. A social or societal elite has usually not been picked by anyone except themselves and do not necessarily make part of the elite due to their competence. Military elite units do not exercise any special leadership over other units. In the societal and social sense of the word, the elite of the army is the officer corps, not the elite units.Elite military
In the military community, it is not considered good resource management to create elite units that are expected to do the same things as a regular military unit only better, as opposed to special forces that are expected to do other things than regular soldiers. Critics argue that it creates a negative "second class soldier" feeling among the regular units; for example the grenadier and light infantry companies of the 18th and 19th century British Army. Such companies had both a weakening and demoralising effect on the other soldiers of their parent battalions, especially when these companies were detached from a number of battalions and grouped together to form ad hoc grenadier and light infantry battalions. It is also argued that an especially competent soldier does more good as an NCO (non-commissioned officer) or as just the man who sets a good inspiring example for his comrades . Conversely, some theorists point out that a more powerful unit has a disciplinary effect on the general military core.However, most nations will maintain elite
military forces for the purposes of Power
projection and for the purposes of expeditionary warfare. The
limiting factor in such operations is usually the availability of
airlift
and sealift assets,
rather than manpower, first to get forces in theatre and then to
sustain these forces with stores and supplies e.g. Britain in the
Falklands
War. Such amphibious
and airborne
forces, usually operating with minimal armor, artillery and logistics support will
normally face enemies with superior numbers, prepared positions and
interior lines of communications. Under such circumstances the
additional effort and cost needed for the selection, training,
indoctrination and equipping of elite formations is not only
worthwhile, but essential for success.
In the narrowest sense of the word, elite units
refer only to units of soldiers picked from ordinary troops or
recruits to form an elite unit. However, superior units can also be
created by other means than picking the most promising soldiers and
recruits from regular forces. Such forces can also be created by
having a completely different, parallel recruitment process with
higher standards than the normal troops. Sometimes a completely
different recruitment pool is used such as recruiting
internationally or recruiting from a people that is thought to have
superiour soldier qualities. The French Foreign Legion recruits
professionals internationally and British Gurkha troops are
recruited from the Nepales -a people that impressed the British
with their soldier qualities. In the very strictest sense of the
word these are not elite units since the soldiers are not chosen
from regular soldiers or recruits but they are usually called elite
units nonetheless.
In Commonwealth Militaries, some regiments may be
thought of as "elite" for a number of reasons; a particularly
distinguished combat record (like the Rifles), great media exposure
(the Highland Regiments and the Frontier Force in British India now
Pakistan) or being an "old" regiment with a long history (and often
thus greater support in Headquarters since these regiments have
naturally a higher numbers of senior officers), examples would
include the Coldstream Guards (UK), and the Punjab Regiment in
India and Pakistan. While again not strictly speaking elites, they
often become superior units, since due to their reputation they
attract the best and brightest recruits and cadets (who in many
armies have a choice of assignment)which results in a
correspondingly better performance.
Historically at times of military and
technological change it would have been impossible financially to
re-equip the entire army with new weapons at the same time. To
maximize the benefit of new weapons, elite units may be formed, who
would be superior to the regular troops because of both the new
weapons and additional training and expectations. For example, in
the British Army the Rifle
Regiments were armed with rifles when the rest of the army was
equipped with muskets; before them the
Fusiliers were the first to be armed with flintlocks when the
line units had matchlocks. Armies going through change may need
formations familiar with new concepts and doctrines to act in the
familiarization and adversary training roles. Such units will
naturally perform better than their students; e.g. historically the
Panzerlehrdivision
and currently the
U.S. 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment.
Occasionally a military formation rises quite
unplanned to become an especially competent military unit. While
raised, organized, equipped and using the same operational
procedures as its peers a confluence of events, personalities and
circumstances create traditions, reputations and an esprit de
corps that reinforce each other to lift such units above those
peers. Such formations include the original
51st Highland division and the original
Desert rats and the Pakistani 25th Cavalry.
Elites within an army can also arise
unexpectedly, when only a few units and formations of a army are
involved in combat operations while the rest of the army is on
peacetime duties, the resulting combat skills make them stand out
from their peers, examples would include the 25th Infantry Division
and the 1st Cavalry Div in Vietnam, and the Indian Northern Command
and Pakistani Force Command Northern Areas in Kashmir.
In these two cases it can be argued that units
with more modern weapons or units that just happen to be better
than others are strictly speaking not elite units since they do not
consist of individuals picked for especially high competence but
are recruited just like other units. However, sometimes the words
"elite unit" are somewhat sloppily used to simply imply "unit that
is better than other".
US military use "elite" forces for covert
missions which require better trained soldiers who are more
disciplined and mentally and emotionally stronger.
Politically elite military
Historically many elite forces have been created
and maintained as much for political reasons as for military ones.
The leaders feel they need something more politically reliable than
ordinary units and create elite units, hoping that the privileges,
the extra political indoctrination that such elite forces are
typically given and the pride in belonging to an elite will make
them more loyal. The German Waffen-SS is an
atypical example of such a force evolving as it did into a war
fighting force.
Typically since the days before the Roman
Praetorian
Guards such forces have been used as a loyal and militarily
competent counterweight to the nations' other military forces, to
protect the incumbent leadership from coups and putches. For
example Saddam Hussein had the Iraqi
Republican Guard to keep the normal military in check and the
Iraqi Special Republican Guard to keep an eye on the Republican
Guard. In Moscow the old Soviet Union used a trinity of elite
formations, each carefully balanced with strengths and weaknesses
compared to the others, to keep each other in check and to prevent
the others from seizing power, MVD Internal
Troops (lightly equipped, but experienced from internal
security missions, with a reputation of ruthlessness and
brutality), KGB
Kremlin Guard Force (well trained, led and disciplined but lacking
in supporting arms), and elite Red Army Guards
units (best equipped, but reliant on conscripts). Such
arrangements, though not to the same paranoid extremes shown by the
Soviets, are common in non democratic regimes, especially those
where the leadership's rise to power relied on military
force.
The following description of Iran's
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, or Pasdaran, can be seen as
typical of the formation, evolution and continued raison
d'Êtres of such organizations.
...From the beginning of the new Islamic regime,
the Pasdaran functioned as a corps of the faithful. Its role in
national security evolved from securing the regime and eliminating
opposition forces to becoming a branch of the military
establishment...[and its] independent military power acted as a
check on any possible coup attempts by the armed forces....
....the Pasdaran, under the guidance of such
clerics as Lahuti and Hashemi-Rafsanjani,
was also "to act as the eyes and ears of the Islamic
Revolution" and "as a special task force of the Imam
Khomeini to crush any counterrevolutionary
activities within the government or any political usurper against
the Islamic Government." Over the years the IRP's
leadership used the Pasdaran to eliminate opposition figures and to
enhance its own position. Using the Pasdaran as a springboard to
more important positions, Pasdaran leaders could always obtain
access to the
Revolutionary Council and Khomeini. For example, President
Khamenehi and Majlis
speaker Hashemi-Rafsanjani were both former commanders of the
Pasdaran. Library
of Congress Country Studies, Iran, Special and Irregular Armed
Forces.
At times such forces become so powerful that they
are completely beyond control of the government, or can even become
kingmakers who control
the head of state. The Praetorians infamously auctioned off the
Empire to the highest bidder; the Streltsy first
supported and then tried to depose Peter the
Great, and the Janissaries
repeatedly deposed and installed Ottoman
sultans in the 18th Century.
In other instances, e.g. Iraq's Republican Guard,
such forces have become little more than social clubs for the
societal elites and those seeking advancement through the political
system, capable only of bullying unarmed civilians and intimidating
the regular military, often failing militarily when tested.
Elites in the military
Historical:
Politically Elite Military:
Fictional:
- Emperor's Royal Guard and Dark Troopers from Star Wars
- Covenant Elite a fictional alien race in the video games Halo: Combat Evolved, Halo 2, Halo 3, and Halo Wars
- Shi'ar Imperial Guard from the Marvel Comics universe.
- the superhuman Space Marines and even more elite Adeptus Custodes from Warhammer 40,000
Elitism
In elite theory as developed by Marxist political scientists like Michael Parenti, all sufficiently large social groups will have some kind of elite group within them that actively participates in the group's political dynamics. When a group is arbitrarily excluded from the larger society, such as in the case of the racism that was widespread in the United States prior to the success of the American Civil Rights Movement, then elite members of the excluded group may form a counter-elite to fight for their group's interests (although they may be fighting for those interests only to the extent they mesh with the counter-elite's interests). Of course, the dominant elite can neutralize the counter-elite through the classic divide-and-conquer strategy of admitting key members of the counter-elite into the elite.Elitism usually draws envy and resentment from
the lower classes and the counter-elite. There are cases where
elites arguably use this resentment of an elite to maintain their
position. See Communism.
References
Further reading
- Daniel Golden, The Price of Admission: How America's Ruling Class Buys Its Way Into Elite Colleges--And Who Gets Left Outside the Gates, Crown Publishers, 2006, ISBN 1400097967
- R. S. Rose, The Unpast: Elite Violence and Social Control in Brazil, 1954-2000, Ohio University Press 2006, ISBN 0896802434
External links
elite in Czech: Elita
elite in Danish: Elite
elite in German: Elite
elite in Estonian: Eliit
elite in Spanish: Elite
elite in French: Élite
elite in Galician: Elite
elite in Hebrew: אליטה
elite in Lithuanian: Elitas
elite in Japanese: エリート
elite in Polish: Elita
elite in Portuguese: Elite (sociologia)
elite in Russian: Элита
elite in Slovak: Elita
elite in Finnish: Eliitti
elite in Swedish: Elit
elite in Ukrainian: Еліта
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
FFVs,
Vanity Fair, ancienne noblesse, aristocracy, baronage, baronetage, barons, beau monde, beautiful
people, best, best people,
bunch, cabal, cadre, cafe society, cafe-society,
camarilla, carriage
trade, cell, champion, charmed circle,
chivalry, choice, chosen, chosen people, circle, clan, clique, closed circle, coterie, cream, cream of society, crew, crowd, drawing room, elect, elite group, establishment, fashionable
society, fat, flower, for the best, good
society, greatest,
group, handpicked, haut monde, high
life, high society, high-society, hoi polloi, in society, in-crowd,
ingroup, inner circle,
jet set, jet-set, jeunesse doree, junta, junto, knightage, lace-curtain, lords
of creation, matchless, mob, monde, nobility, noblesse, noblesse de robe,
nonesuch, nonpareil, old nobility,
optimal, optimum, outfit, overlapping, paragon, paramount, peerage, peerless, people of fashion,
pick, picked, pink, polite society, power elite,
power structure, pride,
prime, prize, queen, quintessence, quintessential, right
people, ring, royalty, ruling circles, ruling
class, salon, select, set, silk-stocking, smart set,
social register, socially prominent, societe, society, superlative, supreme, surpassing, the Four Hundred,
the best, the best ever, the best people, the brass, the classes,
the tops, the very best, top, top people, unmatchable, unmatched, unparalleled, unsurpassed, upper class,
upper classes, upper crust, upper ten, upper ten thousand, uppercut, very best, we-group,
world of fashion