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From
Kurt Wolff (Trans.) The Sociology of Georg Simmel. New York: Free
Press, 1950, pp. 402 - 408.
If
wandering is the liberation from every given point in space, and thus
the conceptional opposite to fixation at such a point, the sociological
form of the "stranger" presents the unity, as it were, of
these two characteristics. This phenomenon too, however, reveals that
spatial relations are only the condition, on the one hand, and the
symbol, on the other, of human relations. The stranger is thus being
discussed here, not in the sense often touched upon in the past, as
the wanderer who comes today and goes tomorrow, but rather as the
person who comes today and stays to morrow. He is, so to speak, the
potential wanderer: although he has not moved on, he has not quite
overcome the freedom of coming and going. He is fixed within a particular
spatial group, or within a group whose boundaries are similar to spatial
boundaries. But his position in this group is determined, essentially,
by the fact that he has not belonged to it from the beginning, that
he imports qualities into it, which do not and cannot stem from the
group itself. The
unity of nearness and remoteness involved in every human relation
is organized, in the phenomenon of the stranger, in a way which
may be most briefly formulated by saying that in the relationship
to him, distance means that he, who is close by, is far, and strangeness
means that he, who also is far, is actually near. For, to be a stranger
is naturally a very positive relation; it is a specific form of
interaction. The inhabitants of Sirius are not really strangers
to us, at least not in any social logically relevant sense: they
do not exist for us at all; they are beyond far and near. The stranger,
like the poor and like sundry "inner enemies," is an element
of the group itself. His position as a full-fledged member involves
both being outside it and confronting it. The following statements,
which are by no means intended as exhaustive, indicate how elements
which increase distance and repel, in the relations of and with
the stranger produce a pattern of coordination and consistent interaction.
Throughout the
history of economics the stranger everywhere appears as the trader,
or the trader as stranger. As long as economy is essentially self-sufficient,
or products are exchanged within a spatially narrow group, it needs
no middleman: a trader is only required for products that originate
outside the group. Insofar as members do not leave the circle in
order to buy these necessities--in which case they are the "strange"
merchants in that outside territory--the trader must be a stranger,
since nobody else has a chance to make a living.
This position
of the stranger stands out more sharply if he settles down in the
place of his activity, instead of leaving it again: in innumerable
cases even this is possible only if he can live by intermediate
trade. Once an economy is somehow closed the land is divided up,
and handicrafts are established that satisfy the demand for them,
the trader, too, can find his existence. For in trade, which alone
makes possible unlimited combinations, intelligence always finds
expansions and new territories, an achievement which is very difficult
to attain for the original producer with his lesser mobility and
his dependence upon a circle of customers that can be increased
only slowly. Trade can always absorb more people than primary production;
it is, therefore, the sphere indicated for the stranger, who intrudes
as a supernumerary, so to speak, into a group in which the economic
positions are actually occupied--the classical example is the history
of European Jews. The stranger is by nature no "owner of soil"--soil
not only in the physical, but also in the figurative sense of a
life-substance which is fixed, if not in a point in space, at least
in an ideal point of the social environment. Although in more intimate
relations, he may develop all kinds of charm and significance, as
long as he is considered a stranger in the eyes of the other, he
is not an "owner of soil." Restriction to intermediary
trade, and often (as though sublimated from it) to pure finance,
gives him the specific character of mobility. If mobility takes
place within a closed group, it embodies that synthesis of nearness
and distance which constitutes the formal position of the stranger.
For, the fundamentally mobile person comes in contact, at one time
or another, with every individual, but is not organically connected,
through established ties of kinship, locality, and occupation, with
any single one.
Another expression
of this constellation lies in the objectivity of the stranger. He
is not radically committed to the unique ingredients and peculiar
tendencies of the group, and therefore approaches them with the
specific attitude of "objectivity." But objectivity does
not simply involve passivity and detachment; it is a particular
structure composed of distance and nearness, indifference and involvement.
I refer to the discussion (in the chapter on "Superordination
and Subordination" [8]) of the dominating positions of the
person who is a stranger in the group; its most typical instance
was the practice of those Italian cities to call their judges from
the outside, because no native was free from entanglement in family
and party interests.
With the objectivity
of the stranger is connected, also, the phenomenon touched upon
above, [9] although it is chiefly (but not exclusively) true of
the stranger who moves on. This is the fact that he often receives
the most surprising openness--confidences which sometimes have the
character of a confessional and which would be carefully withheld
from a more closely related person. Objectivity is by no means non-participation
(which is altogether outside both subjective and objective interaction),
but a positive and specific kind of participation--just as the objectivity
of a theoretical observation does not refer to the mind as a passive
tabula rasa on which things inscribe their qualities, but on the
contrary, to its full activity that operates according to its own
laws, and to the elimination, thereby, of accidental dislocations
and emphases, whose individual and subjective differences would
produce different pictures of the same object.
Objectivity
may also be defined as freedom: the objective individual is bound
by no commitments which could prejudice his perception, understanding,
and evaluation of the given. The freedom, however, which allows
the stranger to experience and treat even his close relationships
as though from a bird's-eye view, contains many dangerous possibilities.
In uprisings of all sorts, the party attacked has claimed, from
the beginning of things, that provocation has come from the outside,
through emissaries and instigators. Insofar as this is true, it
is an exaggeration of the specific role of the stranger: he is freer
practically and theoretically; he surveys conditions with less prejudice;
his criteria for them are more general and more objective ideals;
he is not tied down in his action by habit, piety, and precedent.
[10]
Finally, the
proportion of nearness and remoteness which gives the stranger the
character of objectivity, also finds practical expression in the
more abstract nature of the relation to him. That is, with the stranger
one has only certain more general qualities in common, whereas the
relation to more organically connected persons is based on the commonness
of specific differences from merely general features. In fact, all
somehow personal relations follow this scheme in various patterns.
They are determined not only by the circumstance that certain common
features exist among the individuals, along with individual differences,
which either influence the relationship or remain outside of it.
For, the common features themselves are basically determined in
their effect upon the relation by the question whether they exist
only between the participants in this particular relationship, and
thus are quite general in regard to this relation, but are specific
and incomparable in regard to everything outside of it--or whether
the participants feel that these features are common to them because
they are common to a group, a type, or mankind in general. In the
case of the second alternative, the effectiveness of the common
features becomes diluted in proportion to the size of the group
composed of members who are similar in this sense. Although the
commonness functions as their unifying basis, it does not make these
particular persons interdependent on one another, because it could
as easily connect everyone of them with all kinds of individuals
other than the members of his group. This too, evidently, is a way
in which a relationship includes both nearness and distance at the
same time: to the extent to which the common features are general,
they add, to the warmth of the relation founded on them, an element
of coolness, a feeling of the contingency of precisely this relation--the
connecting forces have lost their specific and centripetal character.
In the relation
to the stranger, it seems to me, this constellation has an extraordinary
and basic preponderance over the individual elements that are exclusive
with the particular relationship. The stranger is close to us, insofar
as we feel between him and ourselves common features of a national,
social, occupational, or generally human, nature. He is far from
us, insofar as these common features extend beyond him or us, and
connect us only because they connect a great many people.
A trace of strangeness
in this sense easily enters even the most intimate relationships.
In the stage of first passion, erotic relations strongly reject
any thought of generalization: the lovers think that there has never
been a love like theirs; that nothing can be compared either to
the person loved or to the feelings for that person. An estrangement--whether
as cause or as consequence it is difficult to decide usually comes
at the moment when this feeling of uniqueness vanishes from the
relationship. A certain skepticism in regard to its value, in itself
and for them, attaches to the very thought that in their relation,
after all, they carry out only a generally human destiny; that they
experience an experience that has occurred a thousand times before;
that, had they not accidentally met their particular partner, they
would have found the same significance in another person.
Something of
this feeling is probably not absent in any relation, however close,
because what is common to two is never common to them alone, but
is subsumed under a general idea which includes much else besides,
many possibilities of commonness. No matter how little these possibilities
become real and how often we forget them, here and there, nevertheless,
they thrust themselves between us like shadows, like a mist which
escapes every word noted, but which must coagulate into a solid
bodily form before it can be called jealousy. In some cases, perhaps
the more general, at least the more unsurmountable, strangeness
is not due to different and ununderstandable matters. It is rather
caused by the fact that similarity, harmony, and nearness are accompanied
by the feeling that they are not really the unique property of this
particular relationship: they are something more general, something
which potentially prevails between the partners and an indeterminate
number of others, and therefore gives the relation, which alone
was realized, no inner and exclusive necessity.
On the other
hand, there is a kind of "strangeness" that rejects the
very commonness based on something more general which embraces the
parties. The relation of the Greeks to the Barbarians is perhaps
typical here, as are all cases in which it is precisely general
attributes, felt to be specifically and purely human, that are disallowed
to the other. But "stranger," here, has no positive meaning;
the relation to him is a non-relation; he is not what is relevant
here, a member of the group itself.
As a group member,
rather, he is near and far at the same time, as is characteristic
of relations founded only on generally human commonness. But between
nearness and distance, there arises a specific tension when the
consciousness that only the quite general is common, stresses that
which is not common. In the case of the person who is a stranger
to the country, the city, the race, etc., however, this non-common
element is once more nothing individual, but merely the strangeness
of origin, which is or could be common to many strangers. For this
reason, strangers are not really conceived as individuals, but as
strangers of a particular type: the element of distance is no less
general in regard to them than the element of nearness.
This form is
the basis of such a special case, for instance, as the tax levied
in Frankfort and elsewhere upon medieval Jews. Whereas the Beede
[tax] paid by the Christian citizen changed with the changes of
his fortune, it was fixed once for all for every single Jew. This
fixity rested on the fact that the Jew had his social position as
a Jew, not as the individual bearer of certain objective contents.
Every other citizen was the owner of a particular amount of property,
and his tax followed its fluctuations. But the Jew as a taxpayer
was, in the first place, a Jew, and thus his tax situation had an
invariable element. This same position appears most strongly, of
course, once even these individual characterizations (limited though
they were by rigid invariance) are omitted, and all strangers pay
an altogether equal head-tax.
In spite of
being inorganically appended to it, the stranger is yet an organic
member of the group. Its uniform life includes the specific conditions
of this element. Only we do not know how to designate the peculiar
unity of this position other than by saying that it is composed
of certain measures of nearness and distance. Although some quantities
of them characterize all relationships, a special proportion and
reciprocal tension produce the particular, formal relation to the
"stranger."
ENDNOTES
8. Pp. 216-221
above.--Tr.
9. On pp. 500-502
of the same chapter from which the present "Exhurs" is
taken (IX, "Der Raum und die raumlichen Ordnungen der Gesellschaft,"
(Space and the Spatial Organization of Society). The chapter itself
is not included in this volume.--Tr.
10. But where
the attacked make the assertion falsely, they do so from the tendency
of those in higher position to exculpate inferiors, who, up to the
rebellion, have been in a consistently close relation with them.
For, by creating the fiction that the rebels were not really guilty,
but only instigated, and that the rebellion did not really start
with them, they exonerate themselves, inasmuch as they altogether
deny all real grounds for the uprising.
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