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Sociological Impressionist
Sociological Impressionist ‘ He had an aptitude for describing the simplest everyday experiences with the same precision as is characteristic of a contemporary  impressionistic painting which has learned to reflect the previously  unobserved shades and values of the atmosphere.’  (Mannheim, quoted in Simmel 1990: 32)
The Term Impressionism with the specific context of Berlin;
‘ Impressionism was transformed into a diagnostic category of reflection on the period as a whole, a category in which ultimately the artistic style was only epiphenomenon, a symptom of the underlying style of life’ (Müller 1990: 43) Impressionism in life was seen as characterized by  ‘ acceleration and transitoriness, hectic activity and mobility, as well as the erosion of all established norms and values ’
Simmel thought of himself as taking ‘snapshots’ of everyday life randomly, but ‘viewed from the aspect of eternity’.
‘ What is unique emphasizes what is typical, what is accidental appears  as normal, and the superficial and fleeting stands for what is essential and basic’ (Simmel 1968: 69)
The characterization of Simmel’s project is useful for understanding his project as a form of sociological microscopy, which employs impressionistic descriptions of everyday life within a philosophical approach where the particularity of the everyday is made to register more general social forces.
the life process now revealed itself first in its ties to its smallest elements, the cells, and in its identity with the innumerable and ceaseless interactions between these cells. How they adhere to one another or destroy each other, how they assimilate or chemically influence one another – only this gradually permits one to see how the body shapes, maintains or changes its form. (Simmel 1997: 109)
‘ The fact that people look at and are jealous of one another, that they write each other letters  or have lunch together, that they have sympathetic or antipathetic contacts, quite removed from  any tangible interests, that one person asks another for directions and that people dress up and  adorn themselves for one another – all the thousands of relations from person to person,  momentary or enduring, conscious or unconscious, fleeting or momentous, from which the above  Examples are taken quite at random, continually bind us together. On every day, at every hour,  such threads are spun, dropped, picked up again, replaced by others or woven together with them.  Herein lie the interactions between atoms of society, accessible only to psychological microscopy, which support the entire tenacity and elasticity, the entire variety and uniformity of this so evident and yet so puzzling life of society.’ (Simmel 1997: 109)
Diagnosing the Everyday For Simmel,  the modern everyday evidences a continual assault on the nervous system but the effect of such an assault is radically ambivalent: ‘drifting between hypersensitivity and lack of sensitivity’.
On the one side, the individual is only an element of the whole, only a  member of a higher unity, on the other, the claim that the same individual  is a whole and a unity. (Simmel 1991: 122)
For Simmel,  The city is a space of over-stimulation, where stimuli ‘force the nerves to make such violent responses, tear them about so brutally that they exhaust their last reserves of strength’ (1971: 329). The sensory condition of the metropolis (sensory bombardment) will disrupt the subject’s capacity to negotiate everyday life.
***Simmel conceives of sociology as the study of the forms of sociation. But whoever speaks of forms moves into the field of aesthetics. Society, in the last analysis, is a work of art ***Simmel’s refusal of the unifying system, the philosophical macroview, is not the result of an inability to connect these fragments; rather it emerges from the attempt to find a form of attention that is adequate to everyday life  in the modern world. *** Simmel’s approach to everyday life continually moves from impressionistic detail to abstraction and back again.

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Simmel fragments f everyday life

  • 1.
  • 3. Sociological Impressionist ‘ He had an aptitude for describing the simplest everyday experiences with the same precision as is characteristic of a contemporary impressionistic painting which has learned to reflect the previously unobserved shades and values of the atmosphere.’ (Mannheim, quoted in Simmel 1990: 32)
  • 4. The Term Impressionism with the specific context of Berlin;
  • 5. ‘ Impressionism was transformed into a diagnostic category of reflection on the period as a whole, a category in which ultimately the artistic style was only epiphenomenon, a symptom of the underlying style of life’ (Müller 1990: 43) Impressionism in life was seen as characterized by ‘ acceleration and transitoriness, hectic activity and mobility, as well as the erosion of all established norms and values ’
  • 6. Simmel thought of himself as taking ‘snapshots’ of everyday life randomly, but ‘viewed from the aspect of eternity’.
  • 7. ‘ What is unique emphasizes what is typical, what is accidental appears as normal, and the superficial and fleeting stands for what is essential and basic’ (Simmel 1968: 69)
  • 8. The characterization of Simmel’s project is useful for understanding his project as a form of sociological microscopy, which employs impressionistic descriptions of everyday life within a philosophical approach where the particularity of the everyday is made to register more general social forces.
  • 9. the life process now revealed itself first in its ties to its smallest elements, the cells, and in its identity with the innumerable and ceaseless interactions between these cells. How they adhere to one another or destroy each other, how they assimilate or chemically influence one another – only this gradually permits one to see how the body shapes, maintains or changes its form. (Simmel 1997: 109)
  • 10. ‘ The fact that people look at and are jealous of one another, that they write each other letters or have lunch together, that they have sympathetic or antipathetic contacts, quite removed from any tangible interests, that one person asks another for directions and that people dress up and adorn themselves for one another – all the thousands of relations from person to person, momentary or enduring, conscious or unconscious, fleeting or momentous, from which the above Examples are taken quite at random, continually bind us together. On every day, at every hour, such threads are spun, dropped, picked up again, replaced by others or woven together with them. Herein lie the interactions between atoms of society, accessible only to psychological microscopy, which support the entire tenacity and elasticity, the entire variety and uniformity of this so evident and yet so puzzling life of society.’ (Simmel 1997: 109)
  • 11. Diagnosing the Everyday For Simmel, the modern everyday evidences a continual assault on the nervous system but the effect of such an assault is radically ambivalent: ‘drifting between hypersensitivity and lack of sensitivity’.
  • 12. On the one side, the individual is only an element of the whole, only a member of a higher unity, on the other, the claim that the same individual is a whole and a unity. (Simmel 1991: 122)
  • 13. For Simmel, The city is a space of over-stimulation, where stimuli ‘force the nerves to make such violent responses, tear them about so brutally that they exhaust their last reserves of strength’ (1971: 329). The sensory condition of the metropolis (sensory bombardment) will disrupt the subject’s capacity to negotiate everyday life.
  • 14. ***Simmel conceives of sociology as the study of the forms of sociation. But whoever speaks of forms moves into the field of aesthetics. Society, in the last analysis, is a work of art ***Simmel’s refusal of the unifying system, the philosophical macroview, is not the result of an inability to connect these fragments; rather it emerges from the attempt to find a form of attention that is adequate to everyday life in the modern world. *** Simmel’s approach to everyday life continually moves from impressionistic detail to abstraction and back again.