Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 September 2019
Summary
IN ENGLISH, the primary definition of sociability dates back to the fifteenth century, when it designated ‘the character or quality of being sociable, friendly disposition or intercourse’ (Oxford English Dictionary). In France, the word sociabilite was first used in 1665, and was later defined in the Dictionnaire de l'Academie francaise in 1798 as ‘l'aptitude de l'espèce humaine à vivre en société’ and ‘l'aptitude de l'individu à fréquenter agréablement ses semblables’. From the seventeenth century, the theories of natural rights and social contract included the essential issue of people's propensity to join into society. While in The Leviathan (1651) Thomas Hobbes pointed out a number of limits to man's sociability in a state of nature: man's selfishness, man's cunning and intellectual strength, man's quarrelsome nature, in An Essay Concerning the True Original Extent and End of Civil Government, John Locke justified man's willingness to ‘join in society with others’ by his desire for self-preservation. In 1711, Joseph Addison offered a more precise, refined definition of a model of sociability:
Man is said to be a Sociable Animal, and, as an Instance of it, we may observe, that we take all Occasions and Pretences of forming ourselves into those little Nocturnal Assemblies, which are commonly known by the name of Clubs. When a Sett of Men find themselves agree in any Particular, tho’ never so trivial, they establish themselves into a kind of Fraternity, and meet once or twice a Week, upon the Account of such a Fantastick Resemblance. … When Men are thus knit together, by Love of Society, not a Spirit of Faction, and do not meet to censure or annoy those that are absent, but to enjoy one another: When they are thus combined for their own Improvement, or for the Good of others, or at least to relax themselves from the Business of the Day, by an innocent and chearful Conversation, there may be something very useful in these little Institutions and Establishments.
Addison's stance helped the German sociologist Georg Simmel to define a somewhat artificial model of sociability in which the individual renounces his own ‘personal features’ to experience the pleasure of collective interaction as a goal in itself. Simmel's theories informed research into sociability throughout most of the twentieth century.
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- British Sociability in the Long Eighteenth CenturyChallenging the Anglo-French Connection, pp. 1 - 4Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2019