Language and imagined : Émile Durkheim's civil-linguistic nationalism and the consequences of universal human ideals.

Theory Soc

Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Kumamoto University, 40-1, Kurokami 2-chome, Chuo-ku, Kumamoto, 860-8555 Japan.

Published: May 2020

When Thomas Luckmann, a pioneer of the "linguistic turn" in sociology, regarded Émile Durkheim as a source for the sociology of language, he had lifeworldly community-building in mind. However, the French sociologist himself understood language in the context of . To Durkheim, language was a "social thing in the highest degree" that enabled general ideas and intermediated them to people. Abstract human ideals like the civil religion since the French Revolution could be shared through (a common) language. Thus, Durkheim took the exclusive use of French in the Third Republic's laic public education for granted, ignoring the patois in the country: This "child of the Enlightenment" considered French to be a universal language of and, beyond ethno-communal elements, to work as a basis for the organic solidarity of French national civil society where the social division of labor was progressing. Durkheim's theory was predicated on civil-linguistic, not ethnolinguistic, nationalism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7196881PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11186-020-09394-1DOI Listing

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