Difference between revisions of "Alienation"
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− | the fragmentation of individuals' relations to their work, the things they produce, and the resources with which they produce them. | + | # the fragmentation of individuals' relations to their work, the things they produce, and the resources with which they produce them. Source: Anthromorphemics |
− | + | # Following Marx and Tonnies (thus treating alienation as a sociological concept) and defined in a sentence, alienation is those social structural - social processual forces that accentuate and create "the false separation of individual and society" or do not promote the dialectical interrelation of individual and society. | |
− | Source: Anthromorphemics | ||
[[Category: Anthropology]] | [[Category: Anthropology]] | ||
− | + | [[Category: sociology]] | |
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Latest revision as of 17:52, 4 March 2020
- the fragmentation of individuals' relations to their work, the things they produce, and the resources with which they produce them. Source: Anthromorphemics
- Following Marx and Tonnies (thus treating alienation as a sociological concept) and defined in a sentence, alienation is those social structural - social processual forces that accentuate and create "the false separation of individual and society" or do not promote the dialectical interrelation of individual and society.
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