¶ … Plight of a Stranger
The writer German sociologist Georg Simmel has provided many fine glimpses into his views of society. Simmel has provided unique looks at different aspects of our society and his essay The Stranger offers another look into societal fragmentation. Simmel looks at how the entrance of a stranger into a group changes the group dynamics and how such change affects the group. He looks critically at the marginal personality but finds value in its existence.
Simmel's stranger is not just someone passing through on his way to somewhere else. Instead his stranger is someone who comes into the community and stays. He is not the proverbial wanderer always on his way to somewhere else. He is simply not a member of the group but brings new qualities and features that the group lacked before he came into it. The group itself has behavior that is termed as normal within the group but the stranger brings behavior to the group that is seen as deviant and negative.
Simmel himself was an outsider among other intellectuals in Germany (Spykman, 2004). As a sociologist, Simmel directed a great deal of his academic life to the issue of marginality and to examining the lives of those outside the mainstream. He recognized that marginality was a serious social problem that needed to be addressed but he also saw considerable value in being marginalized. Simmel's studies were based on an analysis of the relationship between the individual and society. For Simmel, modern society was both an aid and hindrance to the development of the individual.
In many ways Simmel believed that modern society had freed the individual from the restraints of former societies (Lechner, 1991). The development of urban life had allowed individuals to play a variety of roles and engage in social situations that would have never been possible in earlier societies. These freedoms, however, came at a price. Today's society grants the individual freedom but it can also cause one to feel...
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