The French Sociologist Émile Durkheim introduced the term Anomie (An-oh-me) to the discipline of Sociology in the late 19th century. The term is both specific and broad, like the Sociological Imagination, in that it is applicable to large social structures and the individuals who compose a society. Unlike the Sociological Imagination, which is a framework for thinking about the world, Anomie is a term that describes a specific state of society, Anomie is a breakdown of social rules and norms which leaves people feeling aimless, hopeless.... floundering if you will. The breakdown of shared values in a community or society leave its members vulnerable to existential isolation and fuels social problems like crime and suicide. Durkheim identifies economic crises, revolution, and rapid technological advancement as potential causes of Anomie. Durkheim, writing in late 1800's France, was living in the new world made possible by the industrial revolution. On the flipside, Durkheim was living in a world undergoing extreme social, economic, and political changes: a near complete reworking of social facts. The industrial revolution introduced new wealth classes, a shift in demographics with factories requiring urbanization to sustain a large workforce, and brought about problems with working and living conditions not faced in the previous social fabric. The benefits of the revolution inspired political shifts as much as the challenges did, and the average person was left to navigate alone, likely disconnected from family and community they might have had in prior decades, and almost certainly alienated from the conventional and generational knowledge regarding life, work, success, and belonging. Do you see parallels today? Are we going through Anomie? Are YOU experiencing Anomie?