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Maffesoli's Neo-Tribes

Sociology
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Maffesoli's Neo-Tribes

Sociology
01 May 2026

Michel Maffesoli’s Theory of Neo-Tribes

Michel Maffesoli (born 1944) is a French sociologist whose 1988 work The Time of the Tribes (Le Temps des tribus) proposed the concept of neo-tribes to describe a new form of community emerging in postmodern, late-modern societies.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Maffesoli argued that in postmodern society, people no longer belong to stable, fixed communities (Tönnies’ Gemeinschaft) or purely rational associations (Gesellschaft) — instead, they form fluid, emotionally driven groupings (neo-tribes) based on shared style, taste, and affective bonds. These groupings are temporary, overlapping, and identity-expressive.

The Core Concept: Neo-Tribes

Neo-tribes are temporary, fluid, postmodern groupings characterised by:

  • Shared aesthetic/style: Members are drawn together by common tastes, music, fashion, or cultural interests (not permanent identity)
  • Emotional/affective bonds: Neo-tribes are based on feeling and experience rather than rational self-interest or traditional obligation
  • Fluid membership: Individuals move in and out of neo-tribes; belonging is temporary and voluntary
  • Multiple memberships: Individuals typically belong to several neo-tribes simultaneously (e.g. a football supporter community, a fitness community, a music fandom)
  • Weak ties: Membership does not require deep personal knowledge of others — one may share space and ritual with strangers
  • Playful, expressive identity: Neo-tribes allow individuals to explore and express identity through group participation

Examples of Neo-Tribes

Neo-Tribe Shared Element Where They Meet
AFL team supporters Team identity, match-day rituals Stadium, pubs, online fan groups
Crossfit communities Fitness practice and ethos Gyms, online challenges
Online gaming communities Shared game, competitive play Online platforms (Discord, Twitch)
LGBTQ+ Pride communities Shared identity and celebration Pride events, social spaces
Environmental activism groups Shared cause Protests, online networks
Music festival communities Shared experience Festivals (Splendour in the Grass, etc.)

Maffesoli vs. Tönnies: A Comparison

Dimension Tönnies (Gemeinschaft) Maffesoli (Neo-Tribes)
Basis of community Shared values, tradition, place Shared affect, style, interest
Stability Fixed, durable Fluid, temporary
Membership Ascribed, life-long Voluntary, multiple, changing
Social context Pre-industrial, traditional Postmodern, globalised
Individual–group Collective primacy Individual chooses tribes
Emotional quality Deep, organic bonds Intense but temporary affective bonds

The Role of Technology

Digital technology has amplified the neo-tribe phenomenon:
- Social media platforms enable people to find and join others with shared interests globally
- Online communities can form rapidly around a shared event, idea, or cultural moment
- The internet supports a multiplication of micro-communities and niche interests

COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes describe neo-tribes as simply “online communities.” Maffesoli’s concept predates the internet — neo-tribes can be offline (e.g. rave culture in the 1980s was a paradigmatic example). Digital technology extends the concept but is not its defining feature.

Evaluation of Maffesoli

Strengths:
- Accurately captures the fluid, multiple, and interest-based nature of many contemporary communities
- Explains why individuals in modern societies can feel simultaneously highly connected and isolated
- Accounts for the proliferation of lifestyle-based communities

Limitations:
- Some argue he overstates the decline of stable communities (family, neighbourhood, ethnic, religious communities retain significant stability)
- “Neo-tribe” may be too broad — lumping together very different types of groupings
- Limited attention to power and inequality within and between neo-tribes

EXAM TIP: VCAA frequently asks students to compare Tönnies and Maffesoli. Know: what each theory emphasises, what it explains well, and what its limitations are. Practise writing a paragraph that compares the two, using specific Australian examples for each.

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