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SOCIOLOGY - Émile Durkheim

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    Emile Durkheim is the philosopher
    who can best help us to understand
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    why capitalism makes us richer and
    yet frequently more miserable.
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    He was born in 1858 in the little
    Frenchtown of Epinal,
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    near the German border. Before he was
    forty, Durkheim was appointed to a
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    powerful and prestigious position
    as a professor at the Sorbonne in Paris.
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    Durkheim lived through the immense rapid
    transformation of France from a
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    largely traditional agricultural society
    to an urban industrial economy.
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    He could see that his country was
    getting richer, that capitalism was
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    extraordinarily productive and in
    certain ways that it was also liberating.
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    But what particularly struck him and
    became the focus for his entire scholarly
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    career was that the economic system
    was doing something very peculiar
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    to people's minds.
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    It was quite literally
    driving them to suicide in
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    ever-increasing numbers.
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    This was the immense
    insight unveiled in Durkheim's
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    most important work: "Suicide",
    published in 1897.
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    The book chronicled a remarkable
    and tragic discovery.
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    That suicide rates seem to shoot up
    once a nation has become
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    industrialized and consumer
    capitalism takes hold.
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    Durkheim observed that the suicide rate
    in the Britain of his day
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    was double that of Italy but in an even
    richer and more advanced Denmark,
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    it was four times higher than in the UK.
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    Durkheim's focus on suicide
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    was intended to shed light on a more
    general level of unhappiness
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    and despair in society.
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    Suicide ws the horrific tip of the
    iceberg of mental distress
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    created by modern capitalism.
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    Across his career, Durkheim
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    tried to explain why people
    had become so unhappy
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    in modern societies and he
    isolated five crucial factors.
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    In traditional societies, people's
    identities are closely tied to belonging
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    to a clan or a class.
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    Few choices are involved.
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    A person might be a baker a
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    Lutheran or married to their second
    cousin without ever having made any self
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    conscious decisions for themselves.
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    They can just step into a place
    created for them by their family
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    and the existing fabric of society.
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    But under modern capitalism,
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    it's the individual that now
    begins to choose everything;
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    what job to take, what
    religion to follow, who to marry,
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    and where to belong.
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    If things go well,
    the individual takes all
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    the credit, but if things go badly,
    the individual is in a crueler
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    place than ever before, for
    it seemingly means that there's
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    no one else to blame but they themselves.
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    Failure becomes a terrible
    judgment upon the individual.
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    This is the particular burden of
    life in modern capitalism.
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    Capitalism raises hopes.
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    Everyone with effort can
    become the boss.
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    Advertising stokes ambition
    by showing us limitless
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    luxury that we could, if
    we play our cards right,
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    secure very soon.
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    The opportunities are said to be
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    enormous but so too are
    the possibilities for disappointment.
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    In modern capitalism,
    envy grows rife.
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    Its easy to become deeply
    dissatisfied with one's lot,
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    not because it's objectively awful,
    but because of tormenting thoughts
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    about all that is almost, but not
    quite within reach.
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    The cheery boosterish side of
    capitalism attracted Durkheim's
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    particular annoyance.
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    In his view, modern society
    struggled to admit
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    that life just is often quite painful and sad.
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    Our tendencies to grief and sorrow
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    are made to look like signs of
    failure rather than, as should
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    be the case, a fair response to
    the arduous fact of the human condition.
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    One of the complaints against
    traditional societies strongly
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    voiced in Romantic literature is that
    people need more freedom.
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    Rebellious types used to complain that
    there were far too many social norms,
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    norms telling you what to wear, what
    you're supposed to do on Sunday
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    afternoons, what parts of an arm
    its respectable for a woman to reveal.
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    Capitalism, following the earlier
    efforts of romantic rebels,
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    has relentlessly
    undermined social norms.
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    Countries have become more
    complex, more anonymous and
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    more diverse.
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    People don't have so much in common
    with one another any more.
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    The collective answers to even
    very important questions
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    like who you should marry, or how
    you should bring up your children
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    have become weaker and less specific.
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    There's a lot of reliance on the
    phrase, "Whatever works for you,"
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    which sounds friendly, but it also means
    that society doesn't much care what you
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    do and doesn't feel confident it
    has good answers to the big
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    questions of your life.
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    In upbeat moments we like to think of
    ourselves as fully up to the task of
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    reinventing life and working everything
    out for ourselves, but in reality,
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    as Durkheim knew, we're often
    simply too tired, too busy, too
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    uncertain, and then there is
    nowhere to turn.
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    Durkheim was himself an atheist, but he
    worried that religion had become
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    implausible, just as its best sides,
    its communal side, would have been
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    most useful to prepare the
    fraying social fabric.
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    Despite its factual errors and its
    fantastical dimensions,
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    Durkheim appreciated religion.
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    He knew that the sense of
    community and consolation
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    that religion offer are highly
    important to people.
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    Capitalism has as yet offered
    nothing to replace this with.
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    Science certainly doesn't offer the
    same opportunities for powerful
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    shared experiences.
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    The periodic table might well
    possess a transcendent
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    beauty and be a marvel of
    intellectual elegance, but it can't
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    draw a society together around it.
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    In the nineteenth century, it had
    looked AT certain moments as if
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    the idea of the nation might grow
    so powerful and intense,
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    that it could take up the sense of
    belonging and shared devotion
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    that had once been supplied by religion.
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    Admittedly, there were some heroic
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    moments but they generally didn't
    work out very well.
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    Family ,too, seemed for a time to offer
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    the experience of belonging,
    that people seem to need.
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    But today, although we do indeed
    invest hugely in our families,
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    they're not as stable as we might
    hope, and by adulthood, children
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    are hardly tied to their
    parents anymore.
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    They don't expect to work
    alongside them,
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    they don't expect their social circles
    to overlap, and they don't
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    feel that their parents' honor
    is in their hands.
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    Today neither family
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    nor the nation are well placed to take up
    the task of giving us a larger sense
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    of belonging, of giving us the
    feeling that we're part of something
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    more valuable than ourselves.
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    Emile Durkheim was a master
    diagnostician of our ills.
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    He shows us that modern
    economies put tremendous
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    pressures on individuals
    and leave them dangerously bereft
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    of authoritative guidance and
    communal solace.
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    We are all Durkheim's heirs, and
    still have ahead of us the task that
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    he grappled with; how we can create
    new ways of belonging, how we
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    can take some of the pressure off
    individuals and find a more correct
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    balance between freedom
    and solidarity,
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    How to generate
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    ideologies that will allow us not to be
    so tough on ourselves for our
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    failures and our setbacks.
Title:
SOCIOLOGY - Émile Durkheim
Description:

Emile Durkheim was a French 19th century sociologist who focused on what modern capitalism does to our minds - and concluded that it might, quite literally, be driving us to an early grave. Please subscribe here: http://tinyurl.com/o28mut7
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Video Language:
English
Team:
PACE
Duration:
07:48
Lori Austill edited English subtitles for SOCIOLOGY - Émile Durkheim
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ITRC Staff ITRC Generic Account edited English subtitles for SOCIOLOGY - Émile Durkheim
ITRC Staff ITRC Generic Account edited English subtitles for SOCIOLOGY - Émile Durkheim
Becky Davis edited English subtitles for SOCIOLOGY - Émile Durkheim

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