{"id":53,"date":"2020-02-03T20:12:04","date_gmt":"2020-02-03T20:12:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/?post_type=chapter&#038;p=53"},"modified":"2020-02-19T20:32:46","modified_gmt":"2020-02-19T20:32:46","slug":"the-nature-of-the-ethnic-group","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/chapter\/the-nature-of-the-ethnic-group\/","title":{"rendered":"The Nature of the Ethnic Group"},"content":{"raw":"<strong>Abstract<\/strong>\r\nIn search of a common denominator for nation, race, nationality, people, the ethnic type of cumulative groups is construed as a device of further sociological research. The ethnic group appears as a subtype of the <em>Gemeinschaft<\/em>, which is formed by the transposition of characteristics from the primary face-to-face group to formation, as well as other conditions necessarily present in the early stages, may change without affecting its identity.\r\n\r\nFriedrich Meinecke, in his book <em>Weltburgertum und Nationalstaat<\/em>,[footnote]Munchen and Berlin: R. Oldenbourg, 1919.[\/footnote] has put his finger on a difference in concepts which distinguished Western and Central European thought on the phenomenon of the nation. Meinecke was mostly concerned with the political and historical implications of this difference when he set the idea of<em> Staatsnation<\/em> against that of <em>Kulturnation<\/em>. But his dichotomy indicates more than that; namely, two scientific approaches to a distinctive category of social facts; two sociologies, as it were; two philosophies of society. based on different sets of attitudes and scales of values.\r\n\r\nThis was almost forty years ago. But even today we find that the prevailing trend of thought differs among students of society who have grown up under German influence and those who are working in the Anglo-Saxon scientific climate. The latter put their main emphasis either on the political implications of nation or on the psychological and historical genesis of nationalism. Now, nationalism, taken either as a psychological or as a historical phenomenon, is not identical with the social fact called \"a nation.\" It is, however, significant that probably the most thoroughgoing essay on the nation which has been published in the English language not only bears the title <em>Nationalism<\/em>[footnote]<em>Nationalism: A Report by a Study Group of the Royal Institute of International Affairs<\/em> (London, 1939); similarly: Carlton J. H. Hayes,<em> Essays on Nationalism<\/em> (New York, 1926). John Oakesmith, on the other hand, gave his book the title,<em> Race and Nationality<\/em> (New York, 1919).[\/footnote] but gives as one of the characteristics of nation the following: \"The idea of a common government whether as a reality in the present or past, or as an aspiration of the future.\"[footnote]<em>Nationalism<\/em>, p. xx.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nThe other class of Continental sociologists have tended to separate the concept of nation from that of the state; they also have emphasized the ontological and phenomenological analysis of nation rather than a genetical interpretation. Thus we find among them a great number of book titles, such as <em>Nation und Staat<\/em>,[footnote]Ignaz Seipel (Vienna, 1916).[\/footnote] <em>Nation und Nationalit\u00e4t<\/em>,[footnote]Friedrich Hertz (Karlsruhe, 1927).[\/footnote] <em>Volk und Nation<\/em>,[footnote]F. J. Neumann (Leipzig, 1888).[\/footnote] and <em>Das eigenstandige Volk<\/em>.[footnote]M. H. Boehm (Gottingen, 1932).[\/footnote] It is significant that the French Sociologist J.T. Delos of Lille divides his recent publication on <em>La Nation<\/em>[footnote]<em>Le Probleme de la civilisation: la nation<\/em> (2 vols. Montreal, 1944) .[\/footnote]\u00a0into two volumes: the first,<em> Sociologie de la nation<\/em>, and the second,<em> Le Nationalisme et l'ordre de droit<\/em>.\r\n\r\nThere is, however, general agreement that the modern nation signifies a definite stage of social organization which is limited not only in time but also in space. As E.H. Carr has pointed out, nation is not a definable and clearly recognizable entity but \"is confined to certain periods of history and to certain parts of the world.\"[footnote]<em>Nationalism and After<\/em> (London, 1945).[\/footnote] \"Today,\" he continues, \"--in the most nation-conscious of all epoches--it would still probably be fair to say that a large numerical majority of the population of the world feel no allegiance to any nation.\"[footnote]<em>Ibid<\/em>., p. 39.[\/footnote] It is of secondary importance whether we hold that nations sprang into existence with the waning of the Middle Ages, with the absolute monarchies of the sixteenth and the seventeenth centuries, or with the French Revolution. As the Chatham House report suggests, \"a good case can be made for each of these views, which are indeed only incompatible so long as the term 'nation' is assumed to be used in each case in an identical sense.\"[footnote]<em>Nationalism<\/em>, p. 5.[\/footnote] For the present purpose we may adopt Carr's procedure, which distinguishes three stages of nationalism, apart from a fourth--the present one.\r\n\r\nIn the first period the national unit was identified with the person of the sovereign, the absolute monarch. As Carr recalls: \"Louis XIV thought that the French nation 'resided wholly in the person of the King'\"[footnote]<em>Op. cit<\/em>., p. 2.[\/footnote] The second period is characterized by the democratization of the nation, which eventually was considered as a corporate personality centered around the<em> bourgeoisie<\/em>. Eventually the nineteenth century brought the socialization of the nation by including the masses of the people. This resulted in the social service state, which claims the absolute loyalty of the whole people to a nation as the instrument of collective interests and ambitions. This description, however, seems to be correct only if we consider Western society in general. The fact is that in many countries, particularly in Germany and in the Slavic regions east of it, the first-named stage seems to be missing. Neither the German princes nor the emperor ever succeeded in creating nation-states in the same sense in which France or England became a nation-state. They did not appeal to national sentiments but to patriotic sentiments. The <em>Vaterland<\/em>, not the<em> Nation<\/em>, was here the central idea of absolutism. Thus, students of the history of nationalism in these parts of Europe have emphasized the transition, which started in the latter part of the eighteenth century, from dynastic and territorial patriotism to nationalism in the modern sense. The Bohemian revivalists of that time, who were backed by the Bohemian aristocracy, originally propagated Bohemian patriotism against Hapsburg patriotism. Only with the spread of the ideas of romanticism and the French Revolution was Bohemian patriotism transformed into a Czech (ethnic) nationalism.\r\n\r\nThe different ways in which national ideology has become foremost in the minds of Europeans east and west of the Rhine has apparently determined their sociological theories. Since there were no clearly defined nations in the Western sense, German and Slavic authors were moved to seek symbols for the entity of nation in a common language or in the biological concept of the race. Although in the nineteenth century nationalism in central Europe traversed approximately the same stages which Carr describes as the second and third periods, the idea remained alive that<em> Kultur<\/em> and <em>Rasse<\/em> indicate some more basic social fact than <em>Staat<\/em> and <em>Staatsnation<\/em> or, in other words, that <em>Staat<\/em> and <em>Staatsnation<\/em> are nothing but the ephemeral manifestations of human groups which are always present in society; the Volk, these scholars maintain, is a basic form of social organization, even <em>the<\/em> basic form, while nation and nation-states are the result of a historical process and may disappear without affecting the existence of <em>V\u00f6lker<\/em>.\r\n\r\nThis concept of <em>Volk<\/em> or<em> narod<\/em> cannot be symbolized adequately by any commonly used English word, such as \"race,\" \"people,\" or \"nation.\" Now, in the field of the social sciences it is often a helpful methodological device to adopt the most colorless term to indicate an elusive or difficult social fact. Pareto aptly used algebraic symbols. In order to find out whether the Continental concept of <em>Volk<\/em> is a legitimate one, we propose to use the term \"ethnic group\" to describe it. This phrase coincides philologically with the French <em>groupe ethnique<\/em> and with the German <em>Volksgruppe<\/em>. Moreover, the Greek describe with <em>ethnos<\/em> about the same social unit, which is called in other languages <em>people<\/em>, <em>popolo<\/em>, <em>peuple<\/em>, <em>Volk<\/em>, <em>narod<\/em>. Finally, the term \"group\" is being used by many sociologists as the <em>genus proximum<\/em> in defining the various types of plurality patterns.[footnote]The term \"ethnic\" has been adopted by some American authors in a much narrower sense. L. Warner and L. Srole have proposed the following definition: \"The term ethnic refers to any individual who considers himself, or is considered, to be a member of a group with a foreign culture and who participates in the activities of the group. Ethnics may be either of foreign or native birth\" (<em>The Social Systems of American Ethnic Groups <\/em>1945, p. 28). Here the main emphasis is given to the individual, while the sociological aspect is almost lost. Moreover, undue distinction is made between minority and majority groups, although both seem to belong basically to the same type of plurality patterns. Cf. also the article \"Ethnic Community\" in the <em>Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences<\/em>. We need not emphasize that in this context \"ethnic group\" is not limited to ethnic fragments and minorities within a larger culture. In our terminology not only the French-Canadians or the Pennsylvania Dutch would be ethnic groups but also the French of France or the Irish in Ireland.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nIn trying to clarify our hypothetical category, \"ethnic group,\" we find it easier to say what it is not than what it is. An ethnic group is not a race, if we take race in the anthropological sense as a group of people with common physical characteristics. Moreover, an ethnic group is not a nation, if we understand nation to mean a society united under a common government or an aggregation of individuals united by political ties as well as by common language or common territory or common race or common tradition or any combination thereof. Our problem becomes more difficult if we wish to distinguish ethnic group from such phenomena as a definite local or regional community, a patriarchical family, a clan, and similar face-to-face groups. However, this is a problem that occurs with every attempt at a classification, be it of social or of physical facts.\r\n\r\nIf we adopt for the moment Ferdinand Tonnies' typological dichotomy, <em>Gemeinschaft<\/em> and<em> Gesellschaft<\/em>,[footnote]<em>Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft<\/em> (1887). For a discussion of this concept see Talcott Parsons, <em>The Structure of Social Action<\/em> (1937).[\/footnote] we would have to classify an ethnic group as a rather pure type of <em>Gemeinschaft<\/em>. We will recall that, according to Tonnies, a group of the association type is based on a definite purpose, although not necessarily on <em>ad hoc<\/em> contractual agreements. It is a means by which the individual attains his own ends. In a community the parties are treated and act as a unit of solidarity. Institutional sanctions, if present, are concerned rather with attitudes than with specific acts. While groups of the community type always live in relatively local as well as social and mental segregation from other groups, such local, social, and mental barriers to social contact, exchange, and circulation are absent in associations. Based on emotional bonds and endowed with a homogeneous cultural heritage, the community aims at the preservation of the group. Based on rational, contractual bonds and endowed with a heterogeneous social heritage, the association aims at the preservation of the individual. In the language of Freud, a community can be said to be derived mainly from subconscious experiences, while an association is derived from direct knowledge.\r\n\r\nCulture is usually regarded as a fundamental factor of an ethnic group. However, the concept of culture is as elusive and contradictory as that of the ethnic group itself. The words <em>Kultur<\/em>, <em>culture<\/em>, appear to mean almost the opposite of what English speakers understand by \"culture.\" While to them civilization usually refers to the late phases or to a superior stage of cultural development, to Continental students <em>Kultur<\/em> is essentially different from civilization. According to them, civilization is a means to an end. Culture is an end in itself; it includes folkways and mores and their manifestations in art and artifact which, persisting through tradition, characterize a human group.[footnote]Cf. Robert Redfield, <em>The Folk Culture of Yucatan<\/em> (Chicago, 1941), p. 132.[\/footnote] While civilization spreads and accumulates through cross-fertilization and diffusion, culture tends to produce itself indefinitely.[footnote]Cf. E. Faris, <em>The Nature of Human Nature<\/em>.... (New York, 1937), p. 3.[\/footnote] We may say that every ethnic group has a distinctive culture, but a common culture pattern does not necessarily constitute an ethnic group. The peasants of all times and regions, for instance, show more or less identical culture traits. Yet they do not form a social group at all, still less an ethnic group. They belong to the same culture<em> type<\/em>, not to the same culture <em>group<\/em>.[footnote]Cf. E.K. Francis, \"The Personality Type of the Peasant according to Hesiod's <em>Works and Days<\/em>,\" <em>Rural Sociology<\/em>, X, No. 3 (1945) 275-94.[\/footnote] An ethnic group may also modify and change its culture without losing its identity.\r\n\r\nEvery group is defined by social interrelationship. All social relations presuppose contacts and communication. Language is one of the most important means of communication between human persons. Thus, we may say that face-to-face relationship is essential in preliterate societies only, but in literate societies the language spoken by the members of an ethnic group must at least be intelligible without much difficulty to all of them. Nevertheless, there seems to be a limit in size beyond which intimate relationship cannot be maintained when ties become too spurious and weak to uphold the existence of the group.\r\n\r\nRacial affinity, too, has been associated with the ethnic group. Now, ethnic groups usually are endogamous; marriages with members of the outgroup are frequently tabooed. However, the laws of genetics do not suggest that inbreeding alone, without selection, results in homogeneous racial strains. How far selection operates in ethnic groups remains largely a controversial matter. Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that the composition of hereditary traits varies from one ethnic group to another. More significant than the real racial composition is an assumed common descent. Awareness of blood relationship and kinship seems to strengthen the ties between the members of a group. And yet the actual genetic composition is apparently irrelevant; for instance, family names follow either the patrilineal or, more rarely, the matrilineal sequence, and only occasionally both. The device of myths to establish a common ancestry for an ethnic group is a very ancient one. At all times man seems to have tampered with the mystery of biological heredity.\r\n\r\nPhysical and mental traits, which are really or only supposedly based on heredity and common descent, influence social behavior in yet another sense. Community or difference of objective characteristics affects human behavior in various ways. Physical traits, being obvious and usually indelible, lend themselves--even if they have gone unnoticed for a long time--readily to rationalizations of attitudes of sympathy and antipathy. Conflict situations, whether between ethnic groups or individuals, often--and not only since Hitler--hinge, as it were, on racial characteristics. The same is probably true of sympathetic sentiments and we-feeling.\r\n\r\nSince humans are spatial entities, the attribution of a territory to ethnic groups is actually only a corollary to local affinity and size which we have discussed before. The only distinction of an ethnic group seems to lie in the exclusiveness with which it usually occupies a definite space. Finally, there is the time factor. Since an ethnic group is based on an elementary feeling of solidarity, we must suppose that mutual adjustment has been achieved over a considerable length of time and that the memory of having possibly belonged to another system of social relationships must have been obliterated.\r\n\r\nThe we-feeling present in the members of any group of the community type is, of course, also a characteristic of the ethnic group. We would not have introduced it expressedly if it did not offer a key to the distinction which we proposed to make between ethnic group and nation. Delos suggests that the transition from ethnic group to nation is characterized by<em> la passage de la communaut\u00e9 de conscience \u00e0 la conscience de former une communaut\u00e9<\/em>.[footnote]<em>Op. cit<\/em>., I, 93.[\/footnote] The phrase cannot be translated literally without conjuring up great confusion. Since Delos himself uses <em>conscience de \"nous\"<\/em> to describe the same phenomenon, we may translate <em>communaut\u00e9 de conscience<\/em> with \"we-feeling.\" The ethnic group, he continues, is <em>une re\u00e1lite objective<\/em>, although there is no <em>conscience r\u00e9flexe<\/em>. Two elements transform the ethnic group into a nation: (1) the knowledge of forming an original entity and (2), the value attached to this fact,<em> Elle se manifeste par la volont\u00e9 de perp\u00e9tuer la vie commune<\/em>.[footnote]<em>Ibid.<\/em>[\/footnote] Consequently, <em>une nation est un peuple \/sic!\/ qui prend conscience de lui-m\u00eame selon ce que l'historie l'a fait; il se replie donc sur soi et sur son pass\u00e9; ce qu'il aime, c'est lui-m\u00eame tel qu'il se conna\u00eet ou se figure \u00eatre.<\/em>[footnote]<em>Ibid<\/em>., p. 94.[\/footnote]\u00a0We thus seem to have arrived at a certain solution. Nationalism, the sentiment of forming a community and the will to perpetuate it by--as we would add--political devices, is indeed the prerequisite. But it apparently presupposes another social fact. To describe it Delos uses the term <em>groupe ethnique<\/em>, although, in one place at least, he inadvertently substitutes the word <em>peuple<\/em>.\r\n\r\nIf sentiment and will are the factors which transform the ethnic group into a nation, the question arises: Which are the constitutional factors of the ethnic group itself?\r\n\r\nThere are a number of characteristics widely ascribed to the ethnic group: common language, folkways and mores, attitudes and standards, territory, descent, history, and, we may now add, common government. In fact, we know that the subjection of a group of people to a common political organization may directly, or, more often, indirectly by imposition of common laws, religion, language, feeling of loyalty, etc., not only forge together different ethnic elements into a new ethnic group but also divide an ethnic group or deliberately alter its structure, culture, and character. This, however, does not answer our question, for upon closer inspection it appears that two or more distinct ethnic groups may share in common certain characteristics, such as language, descent, religion. On the other hand, many ethnic groups are obviously not at all homogeneous as to their descent or religion, for instance.[footnote]Cf. Hans Kohn, <em>The Idea of Nationalism<\/em> (New York, 1944), chap. i.[\/footnote] Still worse, the differences in the general culture pattern of different social strata within all the more developed and complex ethnic groups are very marked. It may even be doubtful whether the peasant culture in one ethnic group is not more closely related to the peasant culture in another than to urban culture in the same ethnic group. Thus, we cannot define the ethnic group as a plurality pattern which is characterized by a distinct language, culture, territory, religion, and so on.\r\n\r\nIt was exactly the attempt to reach a conclusion as to the nature of the ethnic group , inductively, by analyzing objective characteristics of concrete social facts of this kind, which so far has defied the ingenuity of a long series of writers of treatises dealing with our problem. The main reason for this failure must be sought in the fact that the essentially dynamic character of ethnic groups has been largely neglected, for these may represent different stages of development. It may well be the case that factors which have contributed to the formation of an ethnic group will lose their significance--once a certain degree of group coherence has been reached--or will be, later on, replaced by other factors not present in the beginning but contributing to the preservation of the group. In order to decide the issue it would be necessary to analyze the genesis of a great number of existing ethnic groups. Unfortunately, the origins of most ethnic groups lie in the distant and uncertain past. Dubious guesswork alone is our guide in their analysis. The emergence of new ethnic groups in the New world, however, offers more reliable material for the study of our problem. It should be possible from available historical sources to reconstruct their genesis in such a way as to reach definite conclusions. What seems clear even on the basis of our limited knowledge is that it is too early yet to reach any definite conclusions.\r\n\r\nHere we find, for example, sectarian groups which show all the traits and typical behavior of ethnic groups,[footnote]In his study on Group Settlement in western Canada, C.A. Dawson subsumed--and to our opinion correctly--under the heading \"Ethnic Communities\" not only the French Canadians but also the Doukhobors, Mormons, or Mennonites (cf. Canadian Frontiers of Settlement, ed. W.A. Mackintosh and W.L.G. Joerg, Vol. VII 1936).[\/footnote] although, originally, they were joined together from various ethnic elements under the impact of a distinct religious persuasion and church organization and not on the basis of a distinct language, territory, and so on. Moreover, some of them have in the meantime undergone numerous schisms and religious splits which nevertheless have left untouched their identity and coherence. On the other hand, the major ethnic groups which have sprung up in the Americas seem to have been formed not so much by religion as by politics and geography. It should be possible to reconstruct from the available historical sources their genesis in such a way that definite generalizations could be reached. Yet even on the ground of our limited knowledge it becomes clear that, generally speaking, the stages of development traversed by ethnic groups are: expansion--fission--new combination. The factors which condition fission and new combination, however, appear to vary from case to case.\r\n\r\nThe thought suggests itself to us that allegiance to some external object is the most essential single factor in the formation or revival of ethnic groups. But the object of allegiance shifts from period to period, from country to country. It may be a monarch, a religion, language and literature, other forms of a higher culture, a political ideology centered around some type of government, a class, a \"race.\" The type of catalyst apparently changes, as culture and the interests and ideas of man change--but, it seems, there always is a catalyst necessary to join the elements together into an ethnic group.\r\n\r\nDelos suggests that a social fact is a relationship that unites a person to other persons not directly but by the mediation of another term, which he calls<em> l'objet<\/em>, because it is exterior to the <em>sujets<\/em> <em>individuels<\/em>, the persons whom it puts into a relationship.[footnote]<em>Op. cit<\/em>., p. 164.[\/footnote] According to him, all institutions and all groups present this triad: person--object--person. If Delos' position is correct, the element which we have called figuratively a catalyst seems to coincide with his<em> objet extraindividuel et ext\u00e9rieur.<\/em> Yet this object, he maintains, is an element common to all social facts. Should we, therefore, rather choose the type of objects as a principle of classification? Religious groups would be those which have religion as an \"object\"; culture groups, those which have culture as their \"object\"--and so on. Which specific object, however, shall we attribute to an ethnic group? And why does a religious group, under certain conditions, behave exactly as any ethnic group? We even may ask ourselves whether the ideologies and we-feelings which constitute the formative forces in a nation are typologically different from those which constitute the formative forces in a religious group. Hans Kohn said that \"today...nationalism is the most universal religion of all times.\"[footnote]Introduction to <em>National Consciousness<\/em>, by (Walter Sulzbach, Washington, D.C., n.d.), p. iv.[\/footnote] This statement, though exaggerated in a measure, tends to defy any attempt to classify the phenomena under discussion according to \"objects.\" An ethnic group, if we understand Delos rightly, would almost be identical with a nation which has not yet become fully conscious of itself. Would this not be, so to say, a definition <em>ex post facto<\/em>? Or is ethnic group a more universal, perhaps the most universal; fact of human society, while all other social facts are arrived at by way of elimination?\r\n\r\nWe hesitate to draw any definite conclusions from the few reflections presented in this paper. But we may state tentatively the following propositions as a working hypothesis for further investigation:\r\n\r\n1. In their usual connotation the words \"nation,\" \"race,\" \"nationality,\" \"people,\" \"religious group,\" etc., do not indicate any valid and definite categories of sociological classification. Neither do they describe<em> entia realia<\/em> in the philosophical sense, if such exist at all, or even definite types of social facts which would be useful for sociological generalizations.\r\n\r\n2. The term \"ethnic group,\" however, seems to be valuable to describe a variation of the community type. This subtype deserves a special name and formulation because it includes a considerable number of phenomena which are of practical interest to various social sciences. The basic type of the community includes many other phenomena such as the family, caste, or residential community. Nevertheless, we believe it is possible to distinguish them from the ethnic group. While the family or residential community is unable to satisfy all the basic societal needs of human nature, the ethnic group not only permits a high degree of self-sufficiency and segregation but tends to enforce and preserve it.\r\n\r\nOn the other hand, the ethnic group is not so much dependent on face-to-face relationship as other types of communities. We find that the pattern of social interaction which is characteristic of the primary group permits its extension under certain conditions to a larger, locally less well-defined, and culturally less homogeneous group. We may, for instance, think of a peasant village as an ideal primary group. Now, under certain conditions, the we-feeling of this community can be made to include the natives of a valley or of a wider region, even a whole country. Thus, a larger, but secondary, group is being formed which presents most of the characteristics originally attached to the primary group. In this way, we may say, the ethnic group is the most inclusive, cumulative, and realistic type of secondary community.\r\n\r\n3. The catalyst, or principal factor, which brings about such an extension of we-feeling is a mental process based on abstraction and hypostatical transposition of characteristics from the primary to the secondary group.[footnote]It is significant that in L. von Wiese (ed. Howard Becker),<em> Systematic Sociology<\/em> (1932), the following classification of plurality patterns is suggested: crowds, groups <em>abstract<\/em> collectivities.[\/footnote] We may say that every ethnic group presupposes an ideology, however vague and unreflective it may be. The followers of a new religion, for instance, are moved by the overriding value they attach to their faith to withdraw their we-feeling from the nonbelieving members of their original community and to extend it to all fellow-believers. Since human nature seems to crave a pattern of social interaction which is of the community type, the wish and will become effective to substitute a community of all fellow-believers for the original community. In the same way, a national ideology tends to substitute or to widen a pre-existing community.[footnote]\"The German ideal of the <em>Volksgemeinschaft<\/em>... apparently is an attempt to reduce the complex social unit of a modern nation to the status of a primary group. The unreflective and instinctive participation of every individual of the 'group mind,' the intimacy of social interaction among all its members, the self-understood cooperation and complete community of purpose that is characteristic of a primary group, is being claimed for the totality of the <em>Volk<\/em>. However the same concept underlies other collectivistic ideologies.\" In the Marxian ideal of the classless society \"we find the traits immanent in a primary group extended to a larger unit, in fact to the largest social unit which is conceivable\" (E.K. Francis, \"Progress and Golden Age,\"<em> Dalhousie Review<\/em>, XXV, No. 4 1946, 460-61).[\/footnote]\r\n\r\n4. All ethnic groups behave in the same typical manner, regardless of whether the underlying ideologies hinge on religious, political, cultural, racial, or other characteristics and regardless of whether these characteristics are real or fictitious. Once an ethnic group is well integrated it makes little difference whether\u00a0these characteristics are real or fictitious. Once an ethnic group is well integrated it makes little difference whether the underlying ideology is rationally disproved; for, by then, the community has become real, that is, a social fact, and it will find new rationalizations for its coherence, if ever its ideological basis should be challenged.\r\n\r\n5. It is quite likely that the quest for \"objective\" characteristics by which one concrete ethnic group could be distinguished from any other is futile. But there are certain elements that must be present or which must be deliberately created in the early stages of its genesis, such as a distinctive territory, some sort of distinctive political organization, a common language, a common scale of values. Yet, once the ethnic group has reached a certain maturity, the elements which have conditioned it in the beginning may disappear, change, or be supplanted by others, without affecting its coherence and the <em>communaut\u00e9 de conscience<\/em> among its members. The dissolution of a community is brought about not so much by the loss of external characteristics as by the collision of conflicting values, solidarities, and loyalties.\r\n\r\n6. Finally, no individual group, which is always a singular and unrepeatable phenomenon, will ever coincide with that type of plurality pattern which we have described as an ethnic group. As is the case with every other type, it will be quite legitimate to state that some concrete social group is an ethnic group to a lesser or greater degree. It appears that the modern nation belongs in the category of ethnic groups just as much as the religious communities of other stages of history. It is the result of deliberate political action by which all the ethnic groups that pre-exist within the actual or visualized territory of a state are molded into a new unit of we-feeling, into a new more or less homogeneous ethnic group.\r\n\r\nIn the preceding discussion we have been experimenting with a hypothetical sociological category which we thought could cover a number of phenomena popularly classed together. We have ventured to construe the ethnic type of cumulative groups as a device of sociological research, and we have proposed to term it \"ethnic group.\" Whether this is a useful device can be ascertained only by operating with it for some time and by applying it experimentally to a considerable number of concrete cases.\r\n\r\nUniversity of Manitoba\r\n<p style=\"text-align: right\">Taken from <em>American Journal of Sociology<\/em>, 52 (1947), 393-400, with permission of the university of Chicago Press. \u00a9 1946 by The University of Chicago Press. All rights reserved. Published 1946. Composed and printed by The University of Chicago Press.<\/p>","rendered":"<p><strong>Abstract<\/strong><br \/>\nIn search of a common denominator for nation, race, nationality, people, the ethnic type of cumulative groups is construed as a device of further sociological research. The ethnic group appears as a subtype of the <em>Gemeinschaft<\/em>, which is formed by the transposition of characteristics from the primary face-to-face group to formation, as well as other conditions necessarily present in the early stages, may change without affecting its identity.<\/p>\n<p>Friedrich Meinecke, in his book <em>Weltburgertum und Nationalstaat<\/em>,<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Munchen and Berlin: R. Oldenbourg, 1919.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-1\" href=\"#footnote-53-1\" aria-label=\"Footnote 1\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[1]<\/sup><\/a> has put his finger on a difference in concepts which distinguished Western and Central European thought on the phenomenon of the nation. Meinecke was mostly concerned with the political and historical implications of this difference when he set the idea of<em> Staatsnation<\/em> against that of <em>Kulturnation<\/em>. But his dichotomy indicates more than that; namely, two scientific approaches to a distinctive category of social facts; two sociologies, as it were; two philosophies of society. based on different sets of attitudes and scales of values.<\/p>\n<p>This was almost forty years ago. But even today we find that the prevailing trend of thought differs among students of society who have grown up under German influence and those who are working in the Anglo-Saxon scientific climate. The latter put their main emphasis either on the political implications of nation or on the psychological and historical genesis of nationalism. Now, nationalism, taken either as a psychological or as a historical phenomenon, is not identical with the social fact called &#8220;a nation.&#8221; It is, however, significant that probably the most thoroughgoing essay on the nation which has been published in the English language not only bears the title <em>Nationalism<\/em><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nationalism: A Report by a Study Group of the Royal Institute of International Affairs (London, 1939); similarly: Carlton J. H. Hayes, Essays on Nationalism (New York, 1926). John Oakesmith, on the other hand, gave his book the title, Race and Nationality (New York, 1919).\" id=\"return-footnote-53-2\" href=\"#footnote-53-2\" aria-label=\"Footnote 2\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[2]<\/sup><\/a> but gives as one of the characteristics of nation the following: &#8220;The idea of a common government whether as a reality in the present or past, or as an aspiration of the future.&#8221;<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nationalism, p. xx.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-3\" href=\"#footnote-53-3\" aria-label=\"Footnote 3\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[3]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The other class of Continental sociologists have tended to separate the concept of nation from that of the state; they also have emphasized the ontological and phenomenological analysis of nation rather than a genetical interpretation. Thus we find among them a great number of book titles, such as <em>Nation und Staat<\/em>,<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ignaz Seipel (Vienna, 1916).\" id=\"return-footnote-53-4\" href=\"#footnote-53-4\" aria-label=\"Footnote 4\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[4]<\/sup><\/a> <em>Nation und Nationalit\u00e4t<\/em>,<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Friedrich Hertz (Karlsruhe, 1927).\" id=\"return-footnote-53-5\" href=\"#footnote-53-5\" aria-label=\"Footnote 5\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[5]<\/sup><\/a> <em>Volk und Nation<\/em>,<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"F. J. Neumann (Leipzig, 1888).\" id=\"return-footnote-53-6\" href=\"#footnote-53-6\" aria-label=\"Footnote 6\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[6]<\/sup><\/a> and <em>Das eigenstandige Volk<\/em>.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"M. H. Boehm (Gottingen, 1932).\" id=\"return-footnote-53-7\" href=\"#footnote-53-7\" aria-label=\"Footnote 7\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[7]<\/sup><\/a> It is significant that the French Sociologist J.T. Delos of Lille divides his recent publication on <em>La Nation<\/em><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Le Probleme de la civilisation: la nation (2 vols. Montreal, 1944) .\" id=\"return-footnote-53-8\" href=\"#footnote-53-8\" aria-label=\"Footnote 8\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[8]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0into two volumes: the first,<em> Sociologie de la nation<\/em>, and the second,<em> Le Nationalisme et l&#8217;ordre de droit<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>There is, however, general agreement that the modern nation signifies a definite stage of social organization which is limited not only in time but also in space. As E.H. Carr has pointed out, nation is not a definable and clearly recognizable entity but &#8220;is confined to certain periods of history and to certain parts of the world.&#8221;<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nationalism and After (London, 1945).\" id=\"return-footnote-53-9\" href=\"#footnote-53-9\" aria-label=\"Footnote 9\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[9]<\/sup><\/a> &#8220;Today,&#8221; he continues, &#8220;&#8211;in the most nation-conscious of all epoches&#8211;it would still probably be fair to say that a large numerical majority of the population of the world feel no allegiance to any nation.&#8221;<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., p. 39.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-10\" href=\"#footnote-53-10\" aria-label=\"Footnote 10\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[10]<\/sup><\/a> It is of secondary importance whether we hold that nations sprang into existence with the waning of the Middle Ages, with the absolute monarchies of the sixteenth and the seventeenth centuries, or with the French Revolution. As the Chatham House report suggests, &#8220;a good case can be made for each of these views, which are indeed only incompatible so long as the term &#8216;nation&#8217; is assumed to be used in each case in an identical sense.&#8221;<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nationalism, p. 5.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-11\" href=\"#footnote-53-11\" aria-label=\"Footnote 11\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[11]<\/sup><\/a> For the present purpose we may adopt Carr&#8217;s procedure, which distinguishes three stages of nationalism, apart from a fourth&#8211;the present one.<\/p>\n<p>In the first period the national unit was identified with the person of the sovereign, the absolute monarch. As Carr recalls: &#8220;Louis XIV thought that the French nation &#8216;resided wholly in the person of the King'&#8221;<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Op. cit., p. 2.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-12\" href=\"#footnote-53-12\" aria-label=\"Footnote 12\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[12]<\/sup><\/a> The second period is characterized by the democratization of the nation, which eventually was considered as a corporate personality centered around the<em> bourgeoisie<\/em>. Eventually the nineteenth century brought the socialization of the nation by including the masses of the people. This resulted in the social service state, which claims the absolute loyalty of the whole people to a nation as the instrument of collective interests and ambitions. This description, however, seems to be correct only if we consider Western society in general. The fact is that in many countries, particularly in Germany and in the Slavic regions east of it, the first-named stage seems to be missing. Neither the German princes nor the emperor ever succeeded in creating nation-states in the same sense in which France or England became a nation-state. They did not appeal to national sentiments but to patriotic sentiments. The <em>Vaterland<\/em>, not the<em> Nation<\/em>, was here the central idea of absolutism. Thus, students of the history of nationalism in these parts of Europe have emphasized the transition, which started in the latter part of the eighteenth century, from dynastic and territorial patriotism to nationalism in the modern sense. The Bohemian revivalists of that time, who were backed by the Bohemian aristocracy, originally propagated Bohemian patriotism against Hapsburg patriotism. Only with the spread of the ideas of romanticism and the French Revolution was Bohemian patriotism transformed into a Czech (ethnic) nationalism.<\/p>\n<p>The different ways in which national ideology has become foremost in the minds of Europeans east and west of the Rhine has apparently determined their sociological theories. Since there were no clearly defined nations in the Western sense, German and Slavic authors were moved to seek symbols for the entity of nation in a common language or in the biological concept of the race. Although in the nineteenth century nationalism in central Europe traversed approximately the same stages which Carr describes as the second and third periods, the idea remained alive that<em> Kultur<\/em> and <em>Rasse<\/em> indicate some more basic social fact than <em>Staat<\/em> and <em>Staatsnation<\/em> or, in other words, that <em>Staat<\/em> and <em>Staatsnation<\/em> are nothing but the ephemeral manifestations of human groups which are always present in society; the Volk, these scholars maintain, is a basic form of social organization, even <em>the<\/em> basic form, while nation and nation-states are the result of a historical process and may disappear without affecting the existence of <em>V\u00f6lker<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>This concept of <em>Volk<\/em> or<em> narod<\/em> cannot be symbolized adequately by any commonly used English word, such as &#8220;race,&#8221; &#8220;people,&#8221; or &#8220;nation.&#8221; Now, in the field of the social sciences it is often a helpful methodological device to adopt the most colorless term to indicate an elusive or difficult social fact. Pareto aptly used algebraic symbols. In order to find out whether the Continental concept of <em>Volk<\/em> is a legitimate one, we propose to use the term &#8220;ethnic group&#8221; to describe it. This phrase coincides philologically with the French <em>groupe ethnique<\/em> and with the German <em>Volksgruppe<\/em>. Moreover, the Greek describe with <em>ethnos<\/em> about the same social unit, which is called in other languages <em>people<\/em>, <em>popolo<\/em>, <em>peuple<\/em>, <em>Volk<\/em>, <em>narod<\/em>. Finally, the term &#8220;group&#8221; is being used by many sociologists as the <em>genus proximum<\/em> in defining the various types of plurality patterns.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The term &quot;ethnic&quot; has been adopted by some American authors in a much narrower sense. L. Warner and L. Srole have proposed the following definition: &quot;The term ethnic refers to any individual who considers himself, or is considered, to be a member of a group with a foreign culture and who participates in the activities of the group. Ethnics may be either of foreign or native birth&quot; (The Social Systems of American Ethnic Groups 1945, p. 28). Here the main emphasis is given to the individual, while the sociological aspect is almost lost. Moreover, undue distinction is made between minority and majority groups, although both seem to belong basically to the same type of plurality patterns. Cf. also the article &quot;Ethnic Community&quot; in the Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences. We need not emphasize that in this context &quot;ethnic group&quot; is not limited to ethnic fragments and minorities within a larger culture. In our terminology not only the French-Canadians or the Pennsylvania Dutch would be ethnic groups but also the French of France or the Irish in Ireland.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-13\" href=\"#footnote-53-13\" aria-label=\"Footnote 13\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[13]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>In trying to clarify our hypothetical category, &#8220;ethnic group,&#8221; we find it easier to say what it is not than what it is. An ethnic group is not a race, if we take race in the anthropological sense as a group of people with common physical characteristics. Moreover, an ethnic group is not a nation, if we understand nation to mean a society united under a common government or an aggregation of individuals united by political ties as well as by common language or common territory or common race or common tradition or any combination thereof. Our problem becomes more difficult if we wish to distinguish ethnic group from such phenomena as a definite local or regional community, a patriarchical family, a clan, and similar face-to-face groups. However, this is a problem that occurs with every attempt at a classification, be it of social or of physical facts.<\/p>\n<p>If we adopt for the moment Ferdinand Tonnies&#8217; typological dichotomy, <em>Gemeinschaft<\/em> and<em> Gesellschaft<\/em>,<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft (1887). For a discussion of this concept see Talcott Parsons, The Structure of Social Action (1937).\" id=\"return-footnote-53-14\" href=\"#footnote-53-14\" aria-label=\"Footnote 14\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[14]<\/sup><\/a> we would have to classify an ethnic group as a rather pure type of <em>Gemeinschaft<\/em>. We will recall that, according to Tonnies, a group of the association type is based on a definite purpose, although not necessarily on <em>ad hoc<\/em> contractual agreements. It is a means by which the individual attains his own ends. In a community the parties are treated and act as a unit of solidarity. Institutional sanctions, if present, are concerned rather with attitudes than with specific acts. While groups of the community type always live in relatively local as well as social and mental segregation from other groups, such local, social, and mental barriers to social contact, exchange, and circulation are absent in associations. Based on emotional bonds and endowed with a homogeneous cultural heritage, the community aims at the preservation of the group. Based on rational, contractual bonds and endowed with a heterogeneous social heritage, the association aims at the preservation of the individual. In the language of Freud, a community can be said to be derived mainly from subconscious experiences, while an association is derived from direct knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>Culture is usually regarded as a fundamental factor of an ethnic group. However, the concept of culture is as elusive and contradictory as that of the ethnic group itself. The words <em>Kultur<\/em>, <em>culture<\/em>, appear to mean almost the opposite of what English speakers understand by &#8220;culture.&#8221; While to them civilization usually refers to the late phases or to a superior stage of cultural development, to Continental students <em>Kultur<\/em> is essentially different from civilization. According to them, civilization is a means to an end. Culture is an end in itself; it includes folkways and mores and their manifestations in art and artifact which, persisting through tradition, characterize a human group.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Cf. Robert Redfield, The Folk Culture of Yucatan (Chicago, 1941), p. 132.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-15\" href=\"#footnote-53-15\" aria-label=\"Footnote 15\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[15]<\/sup><\/a> While civilization spreads and accumulates through cross-fertilization and diffusion, culture tends to produce itself indefinitely.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Cf. E. Faris, The Nature of Human Nature.... (New York, 1937), p. 3.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-16\" href=\"#footnote-53-16\" aria-label=\"Footnote 16\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[16]<\/sup><\/a> We may say that every ethnic group has a distinctive culture, but a common culture pattern does not necessarily constitute an ethnic group. The peasants of all times and regions, for instance, show more or less identical culture traits. Yet they do not form a social group at all, still less an ethnic group. They belong to the same culture<em> type<\/em>, not to the same culture <em>group<\/em>.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Cf. E.K. Francis, &quot;The Personality Type of the Peasant according to Hesiod's Works and Days,&quot; Rural Sociology, X, No. 3 (1945) 275-94.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-17\" href=\"#footnote-53-17\" aria-label=\"Footnote 17\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[17]<\/sup><\/a> An ethnic group may also modify and change its culture without losing its identity.<\/p>\n<p>Every group is defined by social interrelationship. All social relations presuppose contacts and communication. Language is one of the most important means of communication between human persons. Thus, we may say that face-to-face relationship is essential in preliterate societies only, but in literate societies the language spoken by the members of an ethnic group must at least be intelligible without much difficulty to all of them. Nevertheless, there seems to be a limit in size beyond which intimate relationship cannot be maintained when ties become too spurious and weak to uphold the existence of the group.<\/p>\n<p>Racial affinity, too, has been associated with the ethnic group. Now, ethnic groups usually are endogamous; marriages with members of the outgroup are frequently tabooed. However, the laws of genetics do not suggest that inbreeding alone, without selection, results in homogeneous racial strains. How far selection operates in ethnic groups remains largely a controversial matter. Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that the composition of hereditary traits varies from one ethnic group to another. More significant than the real racial composition is an assumed common descent. Awareness of blood relationship and kinship seems to strengthen the ties between the members of a group. And yet the actual genetic composition is apparently irrelevant; for instance, family names follow either the patrilineal or, more rarely, the matrilineal sequence, and only occasionally both. The device of myths to establish a common ancestry for an ethnic group is a very ancient one. At all times man seems to have tampered with the mystery of biological heredity.<\/p>\n<p>Physical and mental traits, which are really or only supposedly based on heredity and common descent, influence social behavior in yet another sense. Community or difference of objective characteristics affects human behavior in various ways. Physical traits, being obvious and usually indelible, lend themselves&#8211;even if they have gone unnoticed for a long time&#8211;readily to rationalizations of attitudes of sympathy and antipathy. Conflict situations, whether between ethnic groups or individuals, often&#8211;and not only since Hitler&#8211;hinge, as it were, on racial characteristics. The same is probably true of sympathetic sentiments and we-feeling.<\/p>\n<p>Since humans are spatial entities, the attribution of a territory to ethnic groups is actually only a corollary to local affinity and size which we have discussed before. The only distinction of an ethnic group seems to lie in the exclusiveness with which it usually occupies a definite space. Finally, there is the time factor. Since an ethnic group is based on an elementary feeling of solidarity, we must suppose that mutual adjustment has been achieved over a considerable length of time and that the memory of having possibly belonged to another system of social relationships must have been obliterated.<\/p>\n<p>The we-feeling present in the members of any group of the community type is, of course, also a characteristic of the ethnic group. We would not have introduced it expressedly if it did not offer a key to the distinction which we proposed to make between ethnic group and nation. Delos suggests that the transition from ethnic group to nation is characterized by<em> la passage de la communaut\u00e9 de conscience \u00e0 la conscience de former une communaut\u00e9<\/em>.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Op. cit., I, 93.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-18\" href=\"#footnote-53-18\" aria-label=\"Footnote 18\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[18]<\/sup><\/a> The phrase cannot be translated literally without conjuring up great confusion. Since Delos himself uses <em>conscience de &#8220;nous&#8221;<\/em> to describe the same phenomenon, we may translate <em>communaut\u00e9 de conscience<\/em> with &#8220;we-feeling.&#8221; The ethnic group, he continues, is <em>une re\u00e1lite objective<\/em>, although there is no <em>conscience r\u00e9flexe<\/em>. Two elements transform the ethnic group into a nation: (1) the knowledge of forming an original entity and (2), the value attached to this fact,<em> Elle se manifeste par la volont\u00e9 de perp\u00e9tuer la vie commune<\/em>.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-19\" href=\"#footnote-53-19\" aria-label=\"Footnote 19\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[19]<\/sup><\/a> Consequently, <em>une nation est un peuple \/sic!\/ qui prend conscience de lui-m\u00eame selon ce que l&#8217;historie l&#8217;a fait; il se replie donc sur soi et sur son pass\u00e9; ce qu&#8217;il aime, c&#8217;est lui-m\u00eame tel qu&#8217;il se conna\u00eet ou se figure \u00eatre.<\/em><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., p. 94.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-20\" href=\"#footnote-53-20\" aria-label=\"Footnote 20\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[20]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0We thus seem to have arrived at a certain solution. Nationalism, the sentiment of forming a community and the will to perpetuate it by&#8211;as we would add&#8211;political devices, is indeed the prerequisite. But it apparently presupposes another social fact. To describe it Delos uses the term <em>groupe ethnique<\/em>, although, in one place at least, he inadvertently substitutes the word <em>peuple<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>If sentiment and will are the factors which transform the ethnic group into a nation, the question arises: Which are the constitutional factors of the ethnic group itself?<\/p>\n<p>There are a number of characteristics widely ascribed to the ethnic group: common language, folkways and mores, attitudes and standards, territory, descent, history, and, we may now add, common government. In fact, we know that the subjection of a group of people to a common political organization may directly, or, more often, indirectly by imposition of common laws, religion, language, feeling of loyalty, etc., not only forge together different ethnic elements into a new ethnic group but also divide an ethnic group or deliberately alter its structure, culture, and character. This, however, does not answer our question, for upon closer inspection it appears that two or more distinct ethnic groups may share in common certain characteristics, such as language, descent, religion. On the other hand, many ethnic groups are obviously not at all homogeneous as to their descent or religion, for instance.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Cf. Hans Kohn, The Idea of Nationalism (New York, 1944), chap. i.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-21\" href=\"#footnote-53-21\" aria-label=\"Footnote 21\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[21]<\/sup><\/a> Still worse, the differences in the general culture pattern of different social strata within all the more developed and complex ethnic groups are very marked. It may even be doubtful whether the peasant culture in one ethnic group is not more closely related to the peasant culture in another than to urban culture in the same ethnic group. Thus, we cannot define the ethnic group as a plurality pattern which is characterized by a distinct language, culture, territory, religion, and so on.<\/p>\n<p>It was exactly the attempt to reach a conclusion as to the nature of the ethnic group , inductively, by analyzing objective characteristics of concrete social facts of this kind, which so far has defied the ingenuity of a long series of writers of treatises dealing with our problem. The main reason for this failure must be sought in the fact that the essentially dynamic character of ethnic groups has been largely neglected, for these may represent different stages of development. It may well be the case that factors which have contributed to the formation of an ethnic group will lose their significance&#8211;once a certain degree of group coherence has been reached&#8211;or will be, later on, replaced by other factors not present in the beginning but contributing to the preservation of the group. In order to decide the issue it would be necessary to analyze the genesis of a great number of existing ethnic groups. Unfortunately, the origins of most ethnic groups lie in the distant and uncertain past. Dubious guesswork alone is our guide in their analysis. The emergence of new ethnic groups in the New world, however, offers more reliable material for the study of our problem. It should be possible from available historical sources to reconstruct their genesis in such a way as to reach definite conclusions. What seems clear even on the basis of our limited knowledge is that it is too early yet to reach any definite conclusions.<\/p>\n<p>Here we find, for example, sectarian groups which show all the traits and typical behavior of ethnic groups,<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"In his study on Group Settlement in western Canada, C.A. Dawson subsumed--and to our opinion correctly--under the heading &quot;Ethnic Communities&quot; not only the French Canadians but also the Doukhobors, Mormons, or Mennonites (cf. Canadian Frontiers of Settlement, ed. W.A. Mackintosh and W.L.G. Joerg, Vol. VII 1936).\" id=\"return-footnote-53-22\" href=\"#footnote-53-22\" aria-label=\"Footnote 22\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[22]<\/sup><\/a> although, originally, they were joined together from various ethnic elements under the impact of a distinct religious persuasion and church organization and not on the basis of a distinct language, territory, and so on. Moreover, some of them have in the meantime undergone numerous schisms and religious splits which nevertheless have left untouched their identity and coherence. On the other hand, the major ethnic groups which have sprung up in the Americas seem to have been formed not so much by religion as by politics and geography. It should be possible to reconstruct from the available historical sources their genesis in such a way that definite generalizations could be reached. Yet even on the ground of our limited knowledge it becomes clear that, generally speaking, the stages of development traversed by ethnic groups are: expansion&#8211;fission&#8211;new combination. The factors which condition fission and new combination, however, appear to vary from case to case.<\/p>\n<p>The thought suggests itself to us that allegiance to some external object is the most essential single factor in the formation or revival of ethnic groups. But the object of allegiance shifts from period to period, from country to country. It may be a monarch, a religion, language and literature, other forms of a higher culture, a political ideology centered around some type of government, a class, a &#8220;race.&#8221; The type of catalyst apparently changes, as culture and the interests and ideas of man change&#8211;but, it seems, there always is a catalyst necessary to join the elements together into an ethnic group.<\/p>\n<p>Delos suggests that a social fact is a relationship that unites a person to other persons not directly but by the mediation of another term, which he calls<em> l&#8217;objet<\/em>, because it is exterior to the <em>sujets<\/em> <em>individuels<\/em>, the persons whom it puts into a relationship.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Op. cit., p. 164.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-23\" href=\"#footnote-53-23\" aria-label=\"Footnote 23\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[23]<\/sup><\/a> According to him, all institutions and all groups present this triad: person&#8211;object&#8211;person. If Delos&#8217; position is correct, the element which we have called figuratively a catalyst seems to coincide with his<em> objet extraindividuel et ext\u00e9rieur.<\/em> Yet this object, he maintains, is an element common to all social facts. Should we, therefore, rather choose the type of objects as a principle of classification? Religious groups would be those which have religion as an &#8220;object&#8221;; culture groups, those which have culture as their &#8220;object&#8221;&#8211;and so on. Which specific object, however, shall we attribute to an ethnic group? And why does a religious group, under certain conditions, behave exactly as any ethnic group? We even may ask ourselves whether the ideologies and we-feelings which constitute the formative forces in a nation are typologically different from those which constitute the formative forces in a religious group. Hans Kohn said that &#8220;today&#8230;nationalism is the most universal religion of all times.&#8221;<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Introduction to National Consciousness, by (Walter Sulzbach, Washington, D.C., n.d.), p. iv.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-24\" href=\"#footnote-53-24\" aria-label=\"Footnote 24\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[24]<\/sup><\/a> This statement, though exaggerated in a measure, tends to defy any attempt to classify the phenomena under discussion according to &#8220;objects.&#8221; An ethnic group, if we understand Delos rightly, would almost be identical with a nation which has not yet become fully conscious of itself. Would this not be, so to say, a definition <em>ex post facto<\/em>? Or is ethnic group a more universal, perhaps the most universal; fact of human society, while all other social facts are arrived at by way of elimination?<\/p>\n<p>We hesitate to draw any definite conclusions from the few reflections presented in this paper. But we may state tentatively the following propositions as a working hypothesis for further investigation:<\/p>\n<p>1. In their usual connotation the words &#8220;nation,&#8221; &#8220;race,&#8221; &#8220;nationality,&#8221; &#8220;people,&#8221; &#8220;religious group,&#8221; etc., do not indicate any valid and definite categories of sociological classification. Neither do they describe<em> entia realia<\/em> in the philosophical sense, if such exist at all, or even definite types of social facts which would be useful for sociological generalizations.<\/p>\n<p>2. The term &#8220;ethnic group,&#8221; however, seems to be valuable to describe a variation of the community type. This subtype deserves a special name and formulation because it includes a considerable number of phenomena which are of practical interest to various social sciences. The basic type of the community includes many other phenomena such as the family, caste, or residential community. Nevertheless, we believe it is possible to distinguish them from the ethnic group. While the family or residential community is unable to satisfy all the basic societal needs of human nature, the ethnic group not only permits a high degree of self-sufficiency and segregation but tends to enforce and preserve it.<\/p>\n<p>On the other hand, the ethnic group is not so much dependent on face-to-face relationship as other types of communities. We find that the pattern of social interaction which is characteristic of the primary group permits its extension under certain conditions to a larger, locally less well-defined, and culturally less homogeneous group. We may, for instance, think of a peasant village as an ideal primary group. Now, under certain conditions, the we-feeling of this community can be made to include the natives of a valley or of a wider region, even a whole country. Thus, a larger, but secondary, group is being formed which presents most of the characteristics originally attached to the primary group. In this way, we may say, the ethnic group is the most inclusive, cumulative, and realistic type of secondary community.<\/p>\n<p>3. The catalyst, or principal factor, which brings about such an extension of we-feeling is a mental process based on abstraction and hypostatical transposition of characteristics from the primary to the secondary group.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"It is significant that in L. von Wiese (ed. Howard Becker), Systematic Sociology (1932), the following classification of plurality patterns is suggested: crowds, groups abstract collectivities.\" id=\"return-footnote-53-25\" href=\"#footnote-53-25\" aria-label=\"Footnote 25\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[25]<\/sup><\/a> We may say that every ethnic group presupposes an ideology, however vague and unreflective it may be. The followers of a new religion, for instance, are moved by the overriding value they attach to their faith to withdraw their we-feeling from the nonbelieving members of their original community and to extend it to all fellow-believers. Since human nature seems to crave a pattern of social interaction which is of the community type, the wish and will become effective to substitute a community of all fellow-believers for the original community. In the same way, a national ideology tends to substitute or to widen a pre-existing community.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"&quot;The German ideal of the Volksgemeinschaft... apparently is an attempt to reduce the complex social unit of a modern nation to the status of a primary group. The unreflective and instinctive participation of every individual of the 'group mind,' the intimacy of social interaction among all its members, the self-understood cooperation and complete community of purpose that is characteristic of a primary group, is being claimed for the totality of the Volk. However the same concept underlies other collectivistic ideologies.&quot; In the Marxian ideal of the classless society &quot;we find the traits immanent in a primary group extended to a larger unit, in fact to the largest social unit which is conceivable&quot; (E.K. Francis, &quot;Progress and Golden Age,&quot; Dalhousie Review, XXV, No. 4 1946, 460-61).\" id=\"return-footnote-53-26\" href=\"#footnote-53-26\" aria-label=\"Footnote 26\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[26]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>4. All ethnic groups behave in the same typical manner, regardless of whether the underlying ideologies hinge on religious, political, cultural, racial, or other characteristics and regardless of whether these characteristics are real or fictitious. Once an ethnic group is well integrated it makes little difference whether\u00a0these characteristics are real or fictitious. Once an ethnic group is well integrated it makes little difference whether the underlying ideology is rationally disproved; for, by then, the community has become real, that is, a social fact, and it will find new rationalizations for its coherence, if ever its ideological basis should be challenged.<\/p>\n<p>5. It is quite likely that the quest for &#8220;objective&#8221; characteristics by which one concrete ethnic group could be distinguished from any other is futile. But there are certain elements that must be present or which must be deliberately created in the early stages of its genesis, such as a distinctive territory, some sort of distinctive political organization, a common language, a common scale of values. Yet, once the ethnic group has reached a certain maturity, the elements which have conditioned it in the beginning may disappear, change, or be supplanted by others, without affecting its coherence and the <em>communaut\u00e9 de conscience<\/em> among its members. The dissolution of a community is brought about not so much by the loss of external characteristics as by the collision of conflicting values, solidarities, and loyalties.<\/p>\n<p>6. Finally, no individual group, which is always a singular and unrepeatable phenomenon, will ever coincide with that type of plurality pattern which we have described as an ethnic group. As is the case with every other type, it will be quite legitimate to state that some concrete social group is an ethnic group to a lesser or greater degree. It appears that the modern nation belongs in the category of ethnic groups just as much as the religious communities of other stages of history. It is the result of deliberate political action by which all the ethnic groups that pre-exist within the actual or visualized territory of a state are molded into a new unit of we-feeling, into a new more or less homogeneous ethnic group.<\/p>\n<p>In the preceding discussion we have been experimenting with a hypothetical sociological category which we thought could cover a number of phenomena popularly classed together. We have ventured to construe the ethnic type of cumulative groups as a device of sociological research, and we have proposed to term it &#8220;ethnic group.&#8221; Whether this is a useful device can be ascertained only by operating with it for some time and by applying it experimentally to a considerable number of concrete cases.<\/p>\n<p>University of Manitoba<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: right\">Taken from <em>American Journal of Sociology<\/em>, 52 (1947), 393-400, with permission of the university of Chicago Press. \u00a9 1946 by The University of Chicago Press. All rights reserved. Published 1946. Composed and printed by The University of Chicago Press.<\/p>\n<hr class=\"before-footnotes clear\" \/><div class=\"footnotes\"><ol><li id=\"footnote-53-1\">Munchen and Berlin: R. Oldenbourg, 1919. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-1\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 1\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-2\"><em>Nationalism: A Report by a Study Group of the Royal Institute of International Affairs<\/em> (London, 1939); similarly: Carlton J. H. Hayes,<em> Essays on Nationalism<\/em> (New York, 1926). John Oakesmith, on the other hand, gave his book the title,<em> Race and Nationality<\/em> (New York, 1919). <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-2\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 2\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-3\"><em>Nationalism<\/em>, p. xx. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-3\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 3\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-4\">Ignaz Seipel (Vienna, 1916). <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-4\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 4\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-5\">Friedrich Hertz (Karlsruhe, 1927). <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-5\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 5\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-6\">F. J. Neumann (Leipzig, 1888). <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-6\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 6\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-7\">M. H. Boehm (Gottingen, 1932). <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-7\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 7\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-8\"><em>Le Probleme de la civilisation: la nation<\/em> (2 vols. Montreal, 1944) . <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-8\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 8\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-9\"><em>Nationalism and After<\/em> (London, 1945). <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-9\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 9\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-10\"><em>Ibid<\/em>., p. 39. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-10\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 10\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-11\"><em>Nationalism<\/em>, p. 5. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-11\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 11\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-12\"><em>Op. cit<\/em>., p. 2. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-12\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 12\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-13\">The term \"ethnic\" has been adopted by some American authors in a much narrower sense. L. Warner and L. Srole have proposed the following definition: \"The term ethnic refers to any individual who considers himself, or is considered, to be a member of a group with a foreign culture and who participates in the activities of the group. Ethnics may be either of foreign or native birth\" (<em>The Social Systems of American Ethnic Groups <\/em>1945, p. 28). Here the main emphasis is given to the individual, while the sociological aspect is almost lost. Moreover, undue distinction is made between minority and majority groups, although both seem to belong basically to the same type of plurality patterns. Cf. also the article \"Ethnic Community\" in the <em>Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences<\/em>. We need not emphasize that in this context \"ethnic group\" is not limited to ethnic fragments and minorities within a larger culture. In our terminology not only the French-Canadians or the Pennsylvania Dutch would be ethnic groups but also the French of France or the Irish in Ireland. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-13\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 13\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-14\"><em>Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft<\/em> (1887). For a discussion of this concept see Talcott Parsons, <em>The Structure of Social Action<\/em> (1937). <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-14\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 14\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-15\">Cf. Robert Redfield, <em>The Folk Culture of Yucatan<\/em> (Chicago, 1941), p. 132. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-15\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 15\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-16\">Cf. E. Faris, <em>The Nature of Human Nature<\/em>.... (New York, 1937), p. 3. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-16\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 16\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-17\">Cf. E.K. Francis, \"The Personality Type of the Peasant according to Hesiod's <em>Works and Days<\/em>,\" <em>Rural Sociology<\/em>, X, No. 3 (1945) 275-94. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-17\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 17\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-18\"><em>Op. cit<\/em>., I, 93. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-18\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 18\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-19\"><em>Ibid.<\/em> <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-19\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 19\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-20\"><em>Ibid<\/em>., p. 94. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-20\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 20\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-21\">Cf. Hans Kohn, <em>The Idea of Nationalism<\/em> (New York, 1944), chap. i. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-21\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 21\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-22\">In his study on Group Settlement in western Canada, C.A. Dawson subsumed--and to our opinion correctly--under the heading \"Ethnic Communities\" not only the French Canadians but also the Doukhobors, Mormons, or Mennonites (cf. Canadian Frontiers of Settlement, ed. W.A. Mackintosh and W.L.G. Joerg, Vol. VII 1936). <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-22\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 22\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-23\"><em>Op. cit<\/em>., p. 164. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-23\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 23\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-24\">Introduction to <em>National Consciousness<\/em>, by (Walter Sulzbach, Washington, D.C., n.d.), p. iv. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-24\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 24\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-25\">It is significant that in L. von Wiese (ed. Howard Becker),<em> Systematic Sociology<\/em> (1932), the following classification of plurality patterns is suggested: crowds, groups <em>abstract<\/em> collectivities. <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-25\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 25\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-53-26\">\"The German ideal of the <em>Volksgemeinschaft<\/em>... apparently is an attempt to reduce the complex social unit of a modern nation to the status of a primary group. The unreflective and instinctive participation of every individual of the 'group mind,' the intimacy of social interaction among all its members, the self-understood cooperation and complete community of purpose that is characteristic of a primary group, is being claimed for the totality of the <em>Volk<\/em>. However the same concept underlies other collectivistic ideologies.\" In the Marxian ideal of the classless society \"we find the traits immanent in a primary group extended to a larger unit, in fact to the largest social unit which is conceivable\" (E.K. Francis, \"Progress and Golden Age,\"<em> Dalhousie Review<\/em>, XXV, No. 4 1946, 460-61). <a href=\"#return-footnote-53-26\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 26\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><\/ol><\/div>","protected":false},"author":3,"menu_order":1,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":["efrancis"],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[],"contributor":[65],"license":[],"class_list":["post-53","chapter","type-chapter","status-publish","hentry","contributor-efrancis"],"part":51,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/53","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/chapter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/53\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":228,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/53\/revisions\/228"}],"part":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/parts\/51"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/53\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=53"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=53"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=53"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/ethnicity\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=53"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}