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Bürgerlichkeit

Bürgerlichkeit is a German sociocultural concept denoting the norms, values, and practices of the bourgeois middle class. It encompasses civility, respect for the rule of law, private property, and self-reliance through education and work. In classical sociology the term describes the civilizational project of modern bourgeois society, organizing public life around rationality, merit, and individual responsibility while maintaining a boundary between private life and the political sphere.

Historically the concept arose with the rise of urban middle classes in 18th- and 19th-century Europe. In

In contemporary humanities, Bürgerlichkeit is used to examine citizenship, civil society, and liberal-democratic norms. It serves

German
discourse
it
is
linked
to
Bürgertum
and
bürgerliche
Gesellschaft
and
to
analyses
of
modernization,
industrialization,
and
nation-building.
The
notion
carries
both
positive
associations—social
cohesion,
political
participation,
economic
innovation—and
critical
ambivalence,
since
it
can
imply
conservative
norms
and
exclusion
of
non-bourgeois
groups.
as
a
tool
to
discuss
everyday
life,
cultural
capital,
and
the
legitimating
basis
of
social
hierarchy.
Some
studies
treat
it
as
an
aspirational
ethos
for
social
respectability;
others
scrutinize
its
exclusions,
including
gender,
class,
and
ethnicity.
Thus
the
term
remains
a
flexible,
sometimes
contested
category
in
German-speaking
scholarship.