La Foule. Réflexions autour d’une abstraction

When tracing back to Ancient Greece the history of the intellectual treatment of the crowd in the Western world, one realizes that the ‘crowd itself’ has always been envisaged as an abstraction. All the specific disciplines who took interest the crowd (Philosophy, Literature, Psychology, Sociology,...

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Main Author: Vincent Rubio
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Conserveries Mémorielles 2010-09-01
Series:Conserveries Mémorielles : Revue Transdisciplinaire de Jeunes Chercheurs
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/cm/737
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spelling doaj-236f73133e764e8e9b16e613a929f3202020-11-24T21:35:10ZdeuConserveries MémoriellesConserveries Mémorielles : Revue Transdisciplinaire de Jeunes Chercheurs1718-55562010-09-018La Foule. Réflexions autour d’une abstractionVincent RubioWhen tracing back to Ancient Greece the history of the intellectual treatment of the crowd in the Western world, one realizes that the ‘crowd itself’ has always been envisaged as an abstraction. All the specific disciplines who took interest the crowd (Philosophy, Literature, Psychology, Sociology, etc.) have systematically pictured the crowd as a sui generis being, a being-in-itself. This assertion is not as banal as it may appear. Gustave Le Bon’s Psychology of Crowds appears as a typical ‘miniature’ not only of crowd psychology as well as a whole body of works which foreran the emergence of that particular discipline in the last decade of the 19th Century, but also ultimately of whatever could be qualified as ‘crowd theory.’ Nonetheless, an analysis of Le Bon’s arguments reveals a tautological reasoning in which ‘the crowd makes the crowd’. Of course, this article does not hold the contention that the crowd has no empirical existence. However, the theoretical problems of the notion invite a reconsideration of its status and its nature as a social fact.http://journals.openedition.org/cm/737crowdsLe Bonmythsocial theory.
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vincent Rubio
spellingShingle Vincent Rubio
La Foule. Réflexions autour d’une abstraction
Conserveries Mémorielles : Revue Transdisciplinaire de Jeunes Chercheurs
crowds
Le Bon
myth
social theory.
author_facet Vincent Rubio
author_sort Vincent Rubio
title La Foule. Réflexions autour d’une abstraction
title_short La Foule. Réflexions autour d’une abstraction
title_full La Foule. Réflexions autour d’une abstraction
title_fullStr La Foule. Réflexions autour d’une abstraction
title_full_unstemmed La Foule. Réflexions autour d’une abstraction
title_sort la foule. réflexions autour d’une abstraction
publisher Conserveries Mémorielles
series Conserveries Mémorielles : Revue Transdisciplinaire de Jeunes Chercheurs
issn 1718-5556
publishDate 2010-09-01
description When tracing back to Ancient Greece the history of the intellectual treatment of the crowd in the Western world, one realizes that the ‘crowd itself’ has always been envisaged as an abstraction. All the specific disciplines who took interest the crowd (Philosophy, Literature, Psychology, Sociology, etc.) have systematically pictured the crowd as a sui generis being, a being-in-itself. This assertion is not as banal as it may appear. Gustave Le Bon’s Psychology of Crowds appears as a typical ‘miniature’ not only of crowd psychology as well as a whole body of works which foreran the emergence of that particular discipline in the last decade of the 19th Century, but also ultimately of whatever could be qualified as ‘crowd theory.’ Nonetheless, an analysis of Le Bon’s arguments reveals a tautological reasoning in which ‘the crowd makes the crowd’. Of course, this article does not hold the contention that the crowd has no empirical existence. However, the theoretical problems of the notion invite a reconsideration of its status and its nature as a social fact.
topic crowds
Le Bon
myth
social theory.
url http://journals.openedition.org/cm/737
work_keys_str_mv AT vincentrubio lafoulereflexionsautourduneabstraction
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