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Sie befinden sich hier: Home / Key Works of Sociology / Ferdinand Tönnies – Community and Society (1887)

Ferdinand Tönnies – Community and Society (1887)

26. March 2025 | zuletzt aktualisiert am 19. April 2025 von Christian Wickert

Ferdinand Tönnies’ work “Community and Society” (1887) is considered one of the earliest and most important key texts in sociology. In this work, Tönnies introduces the fundamental distinction between two forms of social life: the traditionally rooted, emotionally bound community and the rationally calculated, purpose-driven society. This differentiation continues to influence sociological analyses of social structures, roles, and societal change to this day.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

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  • Academic and Historical Context
    • Sociology Cheat Sheet
    • Community vs. Society according to Tönnies
  • Central Question of the Work
  • Community and Society: Two Ideal Types of Social Life
    • Community
    • Society
  • Ideal Types as Analytical Tools
    • Excursus: Who coined the term “ideal type”?
  • Social Change in Tönnies
  • Reception and Critique
  • Contemporary Sociological Relevance
    • What Does Glocalization Mean?
  • Conclusion
  • References
  • Further Information

Academic and Historical Context

The work emerged during a period of profound social transformation: industrialization, urbanization, and modernization were altering traditional life worlds and social bonds in Europe. Ferdinand Tönnies (1855–1936), co-founder of German sociology and long-time president of the German Sociological Association, responded to these developments and sought to theoretically grasp the transition from a pre-industrial, community-based society to a modern, functionally differentiated one. He stood in the tradition of philosophical and legal-sociological thought and later influenced theorists such as Max Weber and Talcott Parsons.

Sociology Cheat Sheet

Community vs. Society according to Tönnies

Main Author: Ferdinand Tönnies (1855 – 1936)
Toennies, Ferdinand 1855-1936, sociologist and philosopher, portrait circa 1915
First Published: 1887
Country: Germany
Core Idea: Tönnies distinguishes two basic forms of social life: the emotional, tradition-bound community and the rational-purpose-oriented society. He describes the shift from personal closeness to anonymous, functional relationships as a central feature of modernity.
Foundation for: Tönnies’ ideal types continue to shape sociology and serve as a basis for later theories of social order (e.g. Max Weber), urban sociology, theories of social structure and modernization, as well as current debates on social cohesion and glocalization.

Central Question of the Work

At the heart of Tönnies’ work is the question: How do people organize their social life, and what forms of social bonds create stability? He examines which types of social relationships exist and how they change under the influence of industrialization and rationalization. His answer: two ideal types of social life can be distinguished – community and society.

Community and Society: Two Ideal Types of Social Life

Community

Community, according to Tönnies, is a form of social life characterized by closeness, emotional attachment, and natural solidarity. It arises from “essential will” – an inner drive for belonging and togetherness. Typical examples include family, villages, or traditional neighborhoods. Trust, tradition, and personal responsibility dominate in communities.

Society

In contrast stands society, shaped by rational calculation, purpose orientation, and formal rules. People enter into relationships “arbitrarily” – that is, deliberately and based on interests. Examples include modern cities, markets, states, or organizations. These relationships are often anonymous, utility-driven, and governed by contracts.

MerkmaleGemeinschaftGesellschaft
BindungsformWesenswille (natürlich, emotional)Kürwille (rational, zweckorientiert)
BeziehungsartPersönlich, vertraut, dauerhaftAnonym, vertraglich, zeitlich begrenzt
Typische BeispieleFamilie, Nachbarschaft, DorfStaat, Markt, Organisation
HandlungsgrundlageTradition, Sitte, SolidaritätRationales Kalkül, individuelle Interessen
Soziale KontrolleSoziale Nähe, direkte SanktionenGesetze, Verträge, Bürokratie
Emotionale KomponenteStark ausgeprägt (Nähe, Verbundenheit)Schwach ausgeprägt (Distanziertheit)

Ideal Types as Analytical Tools

Importantly, Tönnies conceives community and society as ideal types – analytical constructs that help describe different forms of social action and coexistence. In reality, mixed forms prevail. Yet these ideal types help us understand the fundamental differences between traditional and modern forms of society.

Excursus: Who coined the term “ideal type”?

The term ideal type originates in the methodology of Max Weber. It refers to a conceptual model that does not exist in pure form in reality but helps to systematically analyze and compare social phenomena.

Ferdinand Tönnies also created such analytical constructs with his categories of community and society, though he did not use the term himself. From today’s perspective, however, his concepts can be understood as ideal types that highlight the tension between personal bonds and rational-purpose-oriented relations.

Max Weber later adopted Tönnies’ distinction and further developed the concept of the ideal type methodologically.

Social Change in Tönnies

The transition from community to society for Tönnies marks the shift from a premodern, agrarian society to an anonymous, urban-industrial modernity. This change comes with the loss of traditional bonds, the dissolution of communal structures, and the rise of rational-bureaucratic institutions. While he does not merely lament this loss, he describes it as a logical consequence of social and economic progress. Still, his work carries a certain melancholy over the erosion of organic communities.

Reception and Critique

Tönnies’ conceptual distinction remains central to sociology. His differentiation between community and society significantly influenced the works of Max Weber (particularly in his categories of traditional and rational authority) and later structural functionalist and modernization theories. It is also foundational for urban sociology and the study of social cohesion.

Tönnies was criticized for the rigid dichotomy between community and society, which in reality is often more fluid. He was also accused of romanticizing community and interpreting societal developments too pessimistically. Nevertheless, his distinction continues to serve as a valuable analytical tool for understanding social transformation and relational change.

Contemporary Sociological Relevance

The call for “community” is growing louder again – in debates about social cohesion, integration, or local identity. Current discussions around urban loneliness or digital alienation can also be interpreted through Tönnies’ ideal types. This is especially evident in the concept of glocalization, which describes how global developments are locally adapted and emotionally grounded. New forms of community are emerging in urban spaces that are simultaneously embedded in global structures. Tönnies’ categories help capture and classify the complex tension between closeness and anonymity, attachment and flexibility, global rationality and local rootedness.

What Does Glocalization Mean?

Glocalization describes the simultaneous processes of globalization and localization. Global economic, technological, and cultural developments are not simply adopted but are locally adapted and merged with traditions, values, and social practices. Hybrid forms of social order emerge that combine global rationality with local community elements.

Examples include neighborhood initiatives using digital platforms, or migration processes where global mobility leads to new local attachments. The term helps us understand how modern societies renegotiate the balance between community and society in a global context.

Conclusion

With “Community and Society”, Ferdinand Tönnies provided a foundational sociological work that remains relevant in research on social structure, urban life, and modernization. His ideal types offer an analytical framework to understand changes in social relations and societal order. More than 130 years after its first publication, the work remains essential reading for sociologists and for anyone seeking to understand the dynamics between closeness and distance, tradition and modernity, community and society.

References

  • Tönnies, F. (2001). Community and Civil Society (J. Harris, Ed., & M. Hollis, Trans.). Cambridge University Press. (Original work published 1887)
  • Harris, J. (1993). From Community to Civil Society: Tönnies’ Premodern/Postmodern Divide. In History of the Human Sciences, 6(3), 59–78.
  • Tester, K. (1992). Civil Society. Routledge.
  • Delanty, G. (2003). Community. Routledge.

Further Information

The Ferdinand Tönnies Society preserves the intellectual legacy of Ferdinand Tönnies and publishes the complete edition of his works.


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Kategorie: General Sociology Tags: community, Community and Society, Ferdinand Tönnies, Germany, glocalization, ideal types, Max Weber, modernity, modernization, social change, social cohesion, social structure, society, sociology, Soziale Identität, Soziale Rollen, Tradition, urban sociology, Zeitdiagnose

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