Tarde, Gabriel

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[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
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[[Category:Sociologists]]
[[Category:Law]]
 
[[Category:Biography]]
 
 
{{epname|Tarde, Gabriel}}
 
{{epname|Tarde, Gabriel}}
[[Image:Tarde gabriel.gif|Thumbnail|right]]
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[[Image:M. Tarde, membre de l'Institut, professeur au Collège de France CIPB0463.jpg|thumb|right|175 px|Gabriel Tarde]]
  
'''Jean-Gabriel Tarde''' (March 12, 1843 – May 13, 1904) was a [[France|French]] [[criminology|criminologist]], [[sociology|sociologist]] and [[social psychology|social psychologist]], noted for his work on [[criminal behavior]]. He opposed [[Emile Durkheim]]’s views of society as a collective unity, suggesting instead individualistic approach to social phenomena. He saw human [[history]] governed by three basic processes - ''Invention'', ''Imitation'', and ''Opposition''.  
+
'''Jean-Gabriel Tarde''' (March 12, 1843 May 13, 1904), a [[France|French]] [[criminology|criminologist]] and [[sociology|sociologist]], is one of the founding fathers of sociology. He opposed the dominant sociological model of his time, [[Emile Durkheim]]’s view of [[society]] as a collective unity, and instead regarded society as an aggregate of individuals.
 +
 
 +
Based on his view of the importance of the individual, Tarde analyzed human society, particularly human progress, to be the result of individuals engaged in relational behaviors according to each individual's characteristics and generally exemplifying one of three basic processes—"Invention," "Imitation," or "Opposition." For example, invention requires a [[giftedness|gifted]] individual in a supportive social context. Although Tarde's work was generally not well received in France due to the dominance of Durkheim's views, his work on [[imitation]] did find relatively ready application in the field of criminology. Arguing against the Positivist criminology of [[Cesare Lombroso]], which held that criminality was inherited, and that someone "born criminal"' could be identified by physical defects, Tarde suggested that the social environment is crucial both in the development of [[crime|criminal]] behavior and its control.
 +
{{toc}}
 +
Receiving a much more positive response in the United States than in Europe, Tarde's work has had a long-term impact on sociology, criminology, and [[social psychology]], fields of study that seek to better understand the social nature of human beings and thus to support the development of healthy societies.
  
 
==Life==
 
==Life==
  
'''Jean-Gabriel Tarde''' was born in Dordogne, Sarlat (now Sarlat-la-Canéda), about one hundred miles east of Bordeaux, [[France]]. He was the son of a military officer and [[judge]]. He was raised by his mother from the age of 7, when his father died. He was educated in a [[Jesuits|Jesuit]] school in Sarlat, obtaining a [[classics|classical]] training. As most of the youth he was confined to bed due to fragile health, he engaged himself in intellectual work, studying philosophy and social sciences. He also studied law in Toulouse and [[Paris]]. From 1869 to 1894 he held several legal posts near Sarlat, and served as a magistrate in Dordogne.  
+
'''Jean-Gabriel Tarde''' was born on March 12, 1843 in Dordogne, Sarlat (now Sarlat-la-Canéda), about one hundred miles east of [[Bordeaux]], [[France]]. He was the son of a military officer and [[judge]]. He was raised by his mother from the age of seven, when his father died. He was educated in a [[Jesuit]] school in Sarlat, obtaining [[classics|classical]] training.  
  
Tarde married in 1877 to Marthe Bardy Delisle, with whom he had three children.
+
As he was confined to bed throughout most of his youth due to fragile health, he engaged himself in intellectual work, studying [[philosophy]] and [[social sciences]]. He also studied [[law]] in [[Toulouse]] and [[Paris]]. From 1869 to 1894 he held several legal posts near Sarlat, and served as a magistrate in Dordogne.  
  
Tarde was made known through his articles on [[psychology]], published in the ''Philosophical Review'' of [[Théodule Ribot]]. In them he criticized "biological fatalism" of [[Cesare Lombroso]]. He published his famous ''La Criminalité Comparée'' (''Comparative Criminology'') in 1886.
+
Tarde married Marthe Bardy Delisle in 1877, with whom he had three children.
  
After the death of his mother, Tarde left Sarlat and settled in Paris. He obtained a post as director of [[crime|criminal]] [[statistics]] at the Ministry of Justice. He also lectured in numerous peripheral institutions outside the university and from 1900 held the chair of modern [[philosophy]] at the [[Collège de France]].
+
Tarde gained public recognition through his articles on [[psychology]], published in the ''Philosophical Review'' of [[Théodule Ribot]]. In them he criticized the "biological fatalism" of [[Cesare Lombroso]], and in 1886 he published his  well-known book, ''La Criminalité Comparée'' ''(Comparative Criminology)''.
  
Tarde died in [[Paris]], [[France]] in 1904. .
+
After the death of his mother, Tarde left Sarlat and settled in Paris. He obtained a post as director of [[crime|criminal]] [[statistics]] at the Ministry of Justice. He also lectured in numerous peripheral institutions outside the university and from 1900 held the chair position of the modern [[philosophy]] department at the [[Collège de France]].
 +
 
 +
Tarde died in Paris, France in 1904.  
  
 
==Work==
 
==Work==
  
Tarde believed that three distinctive, yet interrelated processes characterize human [[history]] - '''Invention''', '''Imitation''', and '''Opposition'''. He wrote on those processes in his 1898 ''Social laws'' (''Les lois sociales'').  
+
Gabriel Tarde believed that three distinctive, yet interrelated processes characterize human society—'''Invention,''' '''Imitation,''' and '''Opposition.''' He wrote on those processes in his 1898 ''Les lois sociales'' ''(Social Laws).''
  
'''Invention''', according to him, was the source of all progress. However, only 1% of people can connect [[creativity|creative]] associations in their minds and can thus be regarded as gifted or inventive. Tarde believed that social factors contribute to inventiveness. For example, more coherent ties and better communication among gifted individuals can lead to mutual stimulation, resulting in greater flow of new ideas. Also, [[culture|cultural]] [[value]]s, like adventurousness or bravery, could lead to new discoveries, as in the time of [[Spain|Spanish]] explorers in the [[Golden Age]].
+
'''Invention,''' according to Tarde, is the source of all progress. However, only one percent of people can make [[creativity|creative]] associations in their [[mind]]s and can thus be regarded as [[gifted]] or [[invention|inventive]]. Tarde believed that social factors contribute to inventiveness. For example, more coherent ties and better [[communication]] among gifted individuals can lead to mutual stimulation, resulting in greater flow of new ideas. Also, [[culture|cultural]] [[value]]s, like adventurousness or bravery, could lead to new discoveries, as in the time of [[Spain|Spanish]] explorers in the [[Golden Age]].
  
'''Imitation''', on the other hand, is much more widespread in society. Most people are not inventive but only copy what they see from other people. Tarde codified his ideas in the “''three laws of imitation''”. These included
+
'''Imitation,''' on the other hand, is much more widespread in society. Most people are not inventive, but only [[imitation|copy]] what they see from other people. Tarde codified his ideas in the “three laws of imitation”:
# the law of close contact;
+
# the law of close contact,
 
# the law of imitation of superiors by inferiors, and  
 
# the law of imitation of superiors by inferiors, and  
 
# the law of insertion.  
 
# the law of insertion.  
  
'''Opposition''' takes place when two or more inventions come to conflict with each other, or when the new and the old ideas collide. Oppositions may be associated with social groups, like nations, regions, or social classes, or may remain inside the minds of individuals. The outcome of opposition is often an adaptation.  
+
'''Opposition''' takes place when two or more inventions come into conflict with each other, or when new and old ideas collide. Oppositions may be associated with social groups, like [[nation]]s, regions, or [[social class]]es, or may remain inside the minds of individuals. The outcome of opposition is often an adaptation.  
  
Tarde was aware of the need to back up his ideas with data, and thus urged the collection of information on different social phenomena - from [[crime]] rates, [[strike]]s, and industrial [[production]], to [[church]] attendance, [[voting]], and similar social acts. He believed that by analyzing such data sociologists would be able to trace shifts in [[public opinion]].
+
Tarde was aware of the need to back up his ideas with data, and thus began the collection of information on different social phenomena—from [[crime]] rates, [[strike]]s, and industrial [[production]], to [[church]] attendance, [[voting]], and similar social acts. He believed that by analyzing such data sociologists would be able to trace shifts in [[public opinion]].
  
Among other areas that Tarde worked on were the "[[group mind]]" and [[economic psychology]], where he anticipated a number of modern developments. He was supporter of [[mass-society]], believing that people need to be together to faster channel new ideas and opinions. He believed that [[newspaper]]s had a particularly crucial role in society, as they helped create public opinions and reinforce group [[loyalty|loyalties]].
+
Among other areas that Tarde worked on were the "[[group mind]]" and [[economic psychology]], in which he anticipated a number of modern developments. He was supporter of [[mass-society]], believing that people need to be together to disperse and apply new ideas and opinions more quickly. He believed that [[newspaper]]s had a particularly crucial role in society, as they helped create public opinions and reinforce group [[loyalty|loyalties]].
  
Tarde’s subtle and individualistic sociology directly opposed [[Emile Durkheim]], who viewed society as a collective unity. Tarde directly challenged Durkheim in many papers. However, as the university system in the French [[Third Republic]] was based on Durkheim’s [[sociology]], Tarde lost the battle. It was only in the [[United States]] that his views were rediscovered several decades later.  
+
Tarde’s subtle and individualistic [[sociology]] directly opposed [[Emile Durkheim]]'s views of society as a collective unity. Tarde directly challenged Durkheim in many papers. However, as the university system in the French [[Third Republic]] was based on Durkheim’s sociology, Tarde lost the battle. It was only in the [[United States]] that his views were rediscovered several decades later.  
  
 
===Criminology===
 
===Criminology===
Tarde left significant influence in the area of [[criminology]].  In his ''La Criminalité comparée'' (1886; ''Comparative Criminality'') Tarde opposed the extreme [[biology|biological]]-causation ideas of [[Cesare Lombroso]] and his School of [[Positivist Criminology]], who claimed that criminality was inherited, and that biological predispositions lead one to become a criminal. Tarde, on the other side claimed that environment played significant role in criminal behavior.
 
  
Tarde held that elite was needed to govern society, keeping the balance between innovative ideas and traditional cultural patterns. Crime and social deviance arise when elite starts to disintegrate. The process is further amplified when elite comes in touch with deviant subcultures through [[migration]]s and other forms of social mobility.  
+
Tarde left significant influence in the area of [[criminology]]. In his ''La Criminalité comparée'' ''(Comparative Criminality)'' (1886), Tarde opposed the extreme [[biology|biological]] causation ideas of [[Cesare Lombroso]] and his school of [[Positivist Criminology]]. Lombroso claimed that criminality was inherited, and that biological predispositions lead one to become a criminal. Tarde, on the other hand, claimed that environment played a significant role in criminal behavior.
 +
 
 +
Tarde held that an elite was needed to govern society, keeping the balance between innovative ideas and traditional cultural patterns. Crime and social deviance arise when this elite starts to disintegrate. The process is further amplified when the elite comes in touch with deviant subcultures through [[human migration|migration]]s and other forms of [[social mobility]].  
  
Tarde devised a theory of "''imitation and suggestion''", through which he tried to explain criminal behavior. He believed that the origins of deviance were similar to the origins of fads and [[fashion]]s, and that his “''three laws of imitation''” can explain why people engage in crime.  
+
Tarde devised a theory of "imitation and suggestion," through which he tried to explain criminal behavior. He believed that the origins of deviance were similar to the origins of fads and [[fashion]]s, and that his “three laws of imitation” can explain why people engage in crime.  
  
'''The law of close contact''' explains that people have a greater tendency to imitate the fashions or behaviors of those around them. If one is constantly surrounded by deviant behavior, one is more likely to imitate that type of behavior than the other of which he knows little. Direct contact with deviance fosters more deviance. Tarde believed that as society becomes denser, people will start to imitate each other more. The [[mass-media]] played key role in the proliferation of crime, as criminals copied each other’s style they heard of from the media.  
+
'''The law of close contact''' explains that people have a greater tendency to imitate the fashions or behaviors of those around them. If one is constantly surrounded by deviant behavior, one is more likely to imitate that type of behavior than any other, of which that person knows little. Direct contact with deviance fosters more deviance. Tarde believed that as society becomes denser, people will start to imitate each other more. He suggested that the [[mass media]] played a key role in the proliferation of crime, as criminals copied each other’s style, which they learned about through the media.  
  
Tarde’s second law of imitation - '''the law of imitation of superiors by inferiors''' - explains that poor or youngsters imitate rich or elders, and that crimes among poor are in fact their attempts to imitate wealthy, high-status people. The third law - '''the law of insertion''' - says that new behaviors are superimposed on old ones and subsequently either reinforce or extinguish previous behavior. For example, if criminals start to use new type of weapon, they will not use the old one any more.  
+
Tarde’s second law of imitation—'''the law of imitation of superiors by inferiors'''—explains that the poor or the young imitate the rich or the more experienced, and that crimes among the poor are in fact their attempts to imitate wealthy, high-status people. The third law—'''the law of insertion'''—says that new behaviors are superimposed on old ones and subsequently either reinforce or extinguish previous behavior. For example, if criminals start to use a new type of weapon, they will not use the old one any more.  
  
 
Tarde’s three laws of imitation had an enormous impact on the study of deviance and social control.
 
Tarde’s three laws of imitation had an enormous impact on the study of deviance and social control.
Line 54: Line 59:
 
==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==
  
Although Tarde had no direct followers in [[France]], except for some [[criminology|criminologists]], his ideas had a long-lasting influence on both [[sociology]] and [[criminology]]. His concept of the [[group mind]] was later taken up and developed by [[Gustave Le Bon]], advanced to explain so-called [[herd behavior]] or [[crowd psychology]]. [[Everett Rogers]] furthered Tarde's "laws of imitation" in the 1962 book ''Diffusion of Innovations''. Sociologists from the [[Chicago school (sociology)|Chicago school]] of sociology took up some Tarde's insights and further built on them. They influenced later thinking about the concepts of social psychology and the diffusion of social ideas.
+
Although Tarde had no direct followers in [[France]], except for some [[criminology|criminologists]], his ideas had a long-lasting influence on both [[sociology]] and criminology. His concept of the [[group mind]] was later taken up and developed by [[Gustave Le Bon]]. Le Bon advanced Tarde’s ideas to explain so-called [[herd behavior]] or [[crowd psychology]]. [[Everett Rogers]] furthered Tarde's "laws of imitation" in the 1962 book ''Diffusion of Innovations.'' Sociologists from the [[Chicago school (sociology)|Chicago school]] of sociology took up some of Tarde's insights and further built on them. They influenced later thinking about the concepts of [[social psychology]] and the diffusion of social ideas.
  
 
==Publications==
 
==Publications==
  
* Tarde, Gabriel. 1902. ''La psychologie économique''. Paris: F. Alcan
+
*[1890] 2003. Tarde, Gabriel. ''Les lois de l'imitation.'' Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1421252783
* Tarde, Gabriel. 1969. ''On communication and social influence: Selected papers''. The Heritage of sociology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
+
*[1890] 2001. Tarde, Gabriel. ''Penal philosophy.'' (original title: ''La philosophie pénale''). New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 076580705X
* Tarde, Gabriel. 1974 (original published 1898). ''Social laws'' (original title: ''Les lois sociales''. Esquisse d’une sociologie). New York: Arno Press. ISBN 0405055277
+
*[1886] 2004 Tarde, Gabriel. ''La criminalité compare.'' Paris: Les Empêcheurs de penser en rond. ISBN 2846710724
* Tarde, Gabriel. 1999 (original published 1893). ''Monadologie et sociologie''. Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo. ISBN 2843240654
+
*[1893] 1999. Tarde, Gabriel. ''Monadologie et sociologie.'' Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo. ISBN 2843240654
* Tarde, Gabriel. 1999 (original published 1895). ''La logique sociale''. Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo. ISBN 2843241170
+
*[1895] 1999. Tarde, Gabriel. ''La logique sociale.'' Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo. ISBN 2843241170
* Tarde, Gabriel. 1999 (original published 1897). ''L’opposition universelle. Essai d’une théorie des contraires''. Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo. ISBN 2843241146
+
*[1896] 2002. Tarde, Gabriel. ''Fragment d'histoire future.'' Abraxas. ISBN 8495536528
* Tarde, Gabriel. 2001 (original published 1890). ''Penal philosophy'' (original title: ''La philosophie pénale''). New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 076580705X
+
*[1897] 1999. Tarde, Gabriel. ''L’opposition universelle. Essai d’une théorie des contraires.'' Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo. ISBN 2843241146
* Tarde, Gabriel. 2001 (original published 1898). ''Études de psychologie sociale''. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 0543986705
+
*[1898] 2001. Tarde, Gabriel. ''Études de psychologie sociale.'' Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 0543986705
* Tarde, Gabriel. 2001 (original published 1901). ''L'opinion et la foule''. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 0543970833
+
*[1898] 1974. Tarde, Gabriel. ''Social Laws.'' (original title: ''Les lois sociales.'' Esquisse d’une sociologie) New York: Arno Press. ISBN 0405055277
* Tarde, Gabriel. 2002 (original published 1896). ''Fragment d'histoire future''. Abraxas. ISBN 8495536528
+
*[1901] 2001. Tarde, Gabriel. ''L'opinion et la foule''. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 0543970833
* Tarde, Gabriel. 2003 (original published 1890). ''Les lois de l'imitation''. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1421252783
+
*1902. Tarde, Gabriel. ''La psychologie économique.'' Paris: F. Alcan
* Tarde, Gabriel. 2003 (original published 1891). ''Les transformations du droit. Étude sociologique''. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 054388564X
+
*1969. Tarde, Gabriel. ''On Communication and Social Influence: Selected Papers.'' Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
* Tarde, Gabriel. 2004 (original published 1886). ''La criminalité comparée''. Paris: Les Empêcheurs de penser en rond. ISBN 2846710724
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 +
*Beirne, Piers. ''Inventing Criminology: Essays on the Rise of Homo criminalis.'' Albany: State University of New York Press. 1993. ISBN 079141275X
 +
*Davis, Michael M. ''Gabriel Tarde, An Essay in Sociological Theory.'' New York: Davis. 1906.
 +
*Encyclopedia of World Biography. [http://www.bookrags.com/Jean_Gabriel_Tarde Jean Gabriel Tarde.] Retrieved October 4, 2007.
 +
*Katz, Elihu. "Rediscovering Gabriel Tarde." ''Political Communication, 23.'' 3. p. 263-270. 2006.
 +
*Williams, Gwen. [http://www.criminology.fsu.edu/crimtheory/tarde.htm Gabriel Tarde and the Imitation of Deviance.] Retrieved October 4, 2007.
  
* Beirne, Piers. 1993. ''Inventing criminology: Essays on the rise of homo criminalis''. SUNY series in deviance and social control. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 079141275X
+
==External Links==
* Davis, Michael M. 1906. ''Gabriel Tarde, an essay in sociological theory''. New York: Davis.
+
All links retrieved May 17, 2017.
* ''Gabriel Tarde''. Encyclopedia of World Biography, on <http://www.bookrags.com>. Retrieved on September 16, 2007, from <http://www.bookrags.com/Jean_Gabriel_Tarde>
 
* Katz, Elihu. 2006. Rediscovering Gabriel Tarde. ''Political Communication, 23''(3), 263-270.
 
* Williams, Gwen. ''Gabriel Tarde and the Imitation of Deviance''. Retrieved on September 16, 2007 from <http://www.criminology.fsu.edu/crimtheory/tarde.htm>
 
  
==External links==
+
*Marsden, Paul. [http://cfpm.org/jom-emit/2000/vol4/marsden_p.html Forefathers of Memetics: Gabriel Tarde and the Laws of Imitation.]
  
* [http://cfpm.org/jom-emit/2000/vol4/marsden_p.html ''Forefathers of Memetics: Gabriel Tarde and the Laws of Imitation''] – Article by Paul Marsden, originally published in ''Journal of Memetics'', vol. 4, 2000
 
* [http://www.britannica.com/ebc/article-9071286 Gabriel Tarde] – Biography in Encyclopedia Britannica
 
* [http://www.criminology.fsu.edu/crimtheory/tarde.htm Gabriel Tarde and the Imitation of Deviance] – On Tarde’s work in the context of social learning theory, by Gwen Williams
 
* [http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/csisp/papers/tarde/blackman.pdf Gabriel Tarde and Social Psychology] – Article by Lisa Blackman
 
* [http://www.answers.com/topic/gabriel-tarde Jean-Gabriel Tarde] – Biography on Answers.com
 
* [http://66.218.69.11/search/cache?ei=UTF-8&p=the+laws+of+imitation&fr=my-vert-web-top&u=socserv2.socsci.mcmaster.ca/%7Eecon/ugcm/3ll3/tarde/laws.pdf&w=laws+law+imitation&d=SuNDTv4-PcdP&icp=1&.intl=us ''Social Laws: An Outline of Sociology''] – Full-text work by Tarde
 
* [http://www.imbroglio.be/site/article.php3?id_article=70 A Tardean Sociology of Mathematics] - Article on Tarde's work
 
  
{{Credit1|Gabriel_Tarde|90009455|}}
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{{Credit1|Gabriel_Tarde|90009455|Cesare_Lombroso|163103597}}

Revision as of 09:25, 4 December 2023

Gabriel Tarde

Jean-Gabriel Tarde (March 12, 1843 – May 13, 1904), a French criminologist and sociologist, is one of the founding fathers of sociology. He opposed the dominant sociological model of his time, Emile Durkheim’s view of society as a collective unity, and instead regarded society as an aggregate of individuals.

Based on his view of the importance of the individual, Tarde analyzed human society, particularly human progress, to be the result of individuals engaged in relational behaviors according to each individual's characteristics and generally exemplifying one of three basic processes—"Invention," "Imitation," or "Opposition." For example, invention requires a gifted individual in a supportive social context. Although Tarde's work was generally not well received in France due to the dominance of Durkheim's views, his work on imitation did find relatively ready application in the field of criminology. Arguing against the Positivist criminology of Cesare Lombroso, which held that criminality was inherited, and that someone "born criminal"' could be identified by physical defects, Tarde suggested that the social environment is crucial both in the development of criminal behavior and its control.

Receiving a much more positive response in the United States than in Europe, Tarde's work has had a long-term impact on sociology, criminology, and social psychology, fields of study that seek to better understand the social nature of human beings and thus to support the development of healthy societies.

Life

Jean-Gabriel Tarde was born on March 12, 1843 in Dordogne, Sarlat (now Sarlat-la-Canéda), about one hundred miles east of Bordeaux, France. He was the son of a military officer and judge. He was raised by his mother from the age of seven, when his father died. He was educated in a Jesuit school in Sarlat, obtaining classical training.

As he was confined to bed throughout most of his youth due to fragile health, he engaged himself in intellectual work, studying philosophy and social sciences. He also studied law in Toulouse and Paris. From 1869 to 1894 he held several legal posts near Sarlat, and served as a magistrate in Dordogne.

Tarde married Marthe Bardy Delisle in 1877, with whom he had three children.

Tarde gained public recognition through his articles on psychology, published in the Philosophical Review of Théodule Ribot. In them he criticized the "biological fatalism" of Cesare Lombroso, and in 1886 he published his well-known book, La Criminalité Comparée (Comparative Criminology).

After the death of his mother, Tarde left Sarlat and settled in Paris. He obtained a post as director of criminal statistics at the Ministry of Justice. He also lectured in numerous peripheral institutions outside the university and from 1900 held the chair position of the modern philosophy department at the Collège de France.

Tarde died in Paris, France in 1904.

Work

Gabriel Tarde believed that three distinctive, yet interrelated processes characterize human society—Invention, Imitation, and Opposition. He wrote on those processes in his 1898 Les lois sociales (Social Laws).

Invention, according to Tarde, is the source of all progress. However, only one percent of people can make creative associations in their minds and can thus be regarded as gifted or inventive. Tarde believed that social factors contribute to inventiveness. For example, more coherent ties and better communication among gifted individuals can lead to mutual stimulation, resulting in greater flow of new ideas. Also, cultural values, like adventurousness or bravery, could lead to new discoveries, as in the time of Spanish explorers in the Golden Age.

Imitation, on the other hand, is much more widespread in society. Most people are not inventive, but only copy what they see from other people. Tarde codified his ideas in the “three laws of imitation”:

  1. the law of close contact,
  2. the law of imitation of superiors by inferiors, and
  3. the law of insertion.

Opposition takes place when two or more inventions come into conflict with each other, or when new and old ideas collide. Oppositions may be associated with social groups, like nations, regions, or social classes, or may remain inside the minds of individuals. The outcome of opposition is often an adaptation.

Tarde was aware of the need to back up his ideas with data, and thus began the collection of information on different social phenomena—from crime rates, strikes, and industrial production, to church attendance, voting, and similar social acts. He believed that by analyzing such data sociologists would be able to trace shifts in public opinion.

Among other areas that Tarde worked on were the "group mind" and economic psychology, in which he anticipated a number of modern developments. He was supporter of mass-society, believing that people need to be together to disperse and apply new ideas and opinions more quickly. He believed that newspapers had a particularly crucial role in society, as they helped create public opinions and reinforce group loyalties.

Tarde’s subtle and individualistic sociology directly opposed Emile Durkheim's views of society as a collective unity. Tarde directly challenged Durkheim in many papers. However, as the university system in the French Third Republic was based on Durkheim’s sociology, Tarde lost the battle. It was only in the United States that his views were rediscovered several decades later.

Criminology

Tarde left significant influence in the area of criminology. In his La Criminalité comparée (Comparative Criminality) (1886), Tarde opposed the extreme biological causation ideas of Cesare Lombroso and his school of Positivist Criminology. Lombroso claimed that criminality was inherited, and that biological predispositions lead one to become a criminal. Tarde, on the other hand, claimed that environment played a significant role in criminal behavior.

Tarde held that an elite was needed to govern society, keeping the balance between innovative ideas and traditional cultural patterns. Crime and social deviance arise when this elite starts to disintegrate. The process is further amplified when the elite comes in touch with deviant subcultures through migrations and other forms of social mobility.

Tarde devised a theory of "imitation and suggestion," through which he tried to explain criminal behavior. He believed that the origins of deviance were similar to the origins of fads and fashions, and that his “three laws of imitation” can explain why people engage in crime.

The law of close contact explains that people have a greater tendency to imitate the fashions or behaviors of those around them. If one is constantly surrounded by deviant behavior, one is more likely to imitate that type of behavior than any other, of which that person knows little. Direct contact with deviance fosters more deviance. Tarde believed that as society becomes denser, people will start to imitate each other more. He suggested that the mass media played a key role in the proliferation of crime, as criminals copied each other’s style, which they learned about through the media.

Tarde’s second law of imitation—the law of imitation of superiors by inferiors—explains that the poor or the young imitate the rich or the more experienced, and that crimes among the poor are in fact their attempts to imitate wealthy, high-status people. The third law—the law of insertion—says that new behaviors are superimposed on old ones and subsequently either reinforce or extinguish previous behavior. For example, if criminals start to use a new type of weapon, they will not use the old one any more.

Tarde’s three laws of imitation had an enormous impact on the study of deviance and social control.

Legacy

Although Tarde had no direct followers in France, except for some criminologists, his ideas had a long-lasting influence on both sociology and criminology. His concept of the group mind was later taken up and developed by Gustave Le Bon. Le Bon advanced Tarde’s ideas to explain so-called herd behavior or crowd psychology. Everett Rogers furthered Tarde's "laws of imitation" in the 1962 book Diffusion of Innovations. Sociologists from the Chicago school of sociology took up some of Tarde's insights and further built on them. They influenced later thinking about the concepts of social psychology and the diffusion of social ideas.

Publications

  • [1890] 2003. Tarde, Gabriel. Les lois de l'imitation. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1421252783
  • [1890] 2001. Tarde, Gabriel. Penal philosophy. (original title: La philosophie pénale). New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 076580705X
  • [1886] 2004 Tarde, Gabriel. La criminalité compare. Paris: Les Empêcheurs de penser en rond. ISBN 2846710724
  • [1893] 1999. Tarde, Gabriel. Monadologie et sociologie. Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo. ISBN 2843240654
  • [1895] 1999. Tarde, Gabriel. La logique sociale. Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo. ISBN 2843241170
  • [1896] 2002. Tarde, Gabriel. Fragment d'histoire future. Abraxas. ISBN 8495536528
  • [1897] 1999. Tarde, Gabriel. L’opposition universelle. Essai d’une théorie des contraires. Le Plessis-Robinson: Institut Synthélabo. ISBN 2843241146
  • [1898] 2001. Tarde, Gabriel. Études de psychologie sociale. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 0543986705
  • [1898] 1974. Tarde, Gabriel. Social Laws. (original title: Les lois sociales. Esquisse d’une sociologie) New York: Arno Press. ISBN 0405055277
  • [1901] 2001. Tarde, Gabriel. L'opinion et la foule. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 0543970833
  • 1902. Tarde, Gabriel. La psychologie économique. Paris: F. Alcan
  • 1969. Tarde, Gabriel. On Communication and Social Influence: Selected Papers. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Beirne, Piers. Inventing Criminology: Essays on the Rise of Homo criminalis. Albany: State University of New York Press. 1993. ISBN 079141275X
  • Davis, Michael M. Gabriel Tarde, An Essay in Sociological Theory. New York: Davis. 1906.
  • Encyclopedia of World Biography. Jean Gabriel Tarde. Retrieved October 4, 2007.
  • Katz, Elihu. "Rediscovering Gabriel Tarde." Political Communication, 23. 3. p. 263-270. 2006.
  • Williams, Gwen. Gabriel Tarde and the Imitation of Deviance. Retrieved October 4, 2007.

External Links

All links retrieved May 17, 2017.


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