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Gabriel Tarde

Gabriel Tarde - Wikipedia

Gabriel Tarde

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Gabriel Tarde
M. Tarde, membre de l'Institut, professeur au Collège de France CIPB0463.jpg
Portrait by Eugène Pirou
Born12 March 1843
Died13 May 1904
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
Alma materUniversity of Toulouse
University of Paris
Scientific career
Fieldssociologist, criminologist and social psychologist
InstitutionsCollège de France
InfluencesAntoine Augustin Cournot, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz[1]
InfluencedAlexandre Lacassagne
Eugen Lovinescu
Bjorn Thomassen
Paolo Virno
Peter Sloterdijk
Serge Moscovici
Everett Rogers
W. I. Thomas
Florian Znaniecki
Robert E. Park
Sigmund Freud
B. R. Ambedkar
Bruno Latour
Tony D. Sampson
Gilles Deleuze

Gabriel Tarde (French: [taʁd]; in full Jean-Gabriel De Tarde;[2] 12 March 1843 – 13 May 1904) was a French sociologist, criminologist and social psychologist who conceived sociology as based on small psychological interactions among individuals (much as if it were chemistry), the fundamental forces being imitation and innovation.

Life[edit]

Tarde was born and raised in Sarlat in the province of Dordogne.[3] He studied law at Toulouse and Paris. From 1869 to 1894 he worked as a magistrate and investigating judge in the province. In the 1880s he corresponded with representatives of the newly formed criminal anthropology, most notably the Italians Enrico Ferri and Cesare Lombroso and the French psychiatrist Alexandre Lacassagne. With the latter, Tarde came to be the leading representative for a "French school" in criminology.[4] In 1900 he was appointed professor in modern philosophy at the Collège de France. As such he was the most prominent contemporary critic of Durkheim's sociology.

Work[edit]

Among the concepts that Tarde initiated were the group mind (taken up and developed by Gustave Le Bon, and sometimes advanced to explain so-called herd behaviour or crowd psychology), and economic psychology, where he anticipated a number of modern developments. Tarde was very critical of Émile Durkheim's work at the level of both methodology and theory.[5] Consider, for example, the Tarde—Durkheim debate in 1903. However, Tarde's insights were ridiculed as "metaphysics" and hastily dismissed by Durkeim and his followers who went on to largely establish the "science" of sociology, and it was not until U.S. scholars, such as the Chicago school, took up his theories that they became famous.[6]

Criminology[edit]

Tarde took an interest in criminology and the psychological basis of criminal behavior while working as a magistrate in public service. He was critical of the concept of the atavistic criminal as developed by Cesare Lombroso. Tarde's criminological studies served as the underpinning of his later sociology.Michael Elkan