All Thinkers

Émile Durkheim

Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) was a French scholar who is widely regarded as one of the founders of modern sociology. He was born in Épinal, in the Lorraine region of north-eastern France, into a Jewish family. His father, grandfather, and great-grandfather had all been rabbis, and his family expected him to follow this path. As a young man he turned away from religious study but remained deeply interested in why religion mattered to societies. He studied at the prestigious École Normale Supérieure in Paris, where his classmates included the philosopher Henri Bergson and the socialist leader Jean Jaurès. He did not immediately find his direction. Early teachers found him brilliant but hard to place. He taught philosophy at several secondary schools while developing his own approach to studying society. In 1887 he became a professor at the University of Bordeaux, where he taught the first sociology course in a French university. He moved to the Sorbonne in Paris in 1902, where he taught for the rest of his life. He founded one of the first major sociology journals, L'Année Sociologique, which brought together a group of brilliant young scholars — his nephew Marcel Mauss, the philosopher Maurice Halbwachs, and others — who became known as the Durkheimian school. His major books include The Division of Labour in Society (1893), The Rules of Sociological Method (1895), Suicide (1897), and The Elementary Forms of Religious Life (1912). Each became foundational for a different area of sociology. He was a passionate patriot who believed sociology could help France become a more just and integrated society. The First World War devastated him. His son André was killed at the Front in 1915, and many of his brightest students died in the trenches. He never recovered from these losses. He died in Paris in 1917 at the age of fifty-nine, two years after his son's death. His influence on sociology has been enormous. His work has shaped how the field studies religion, education, crime, suicide, work, and the relationships between individuals and the societies they live in.

Origin
France
Lifespan
1858-1917
Era
Late 19th and early 20th century
Subjects
Sociology Social Theory Anomie Solidarity Religion And Society
Why They Matter

Durkheim matters because he helped to establish sociology as a serious academic discipline with its own subject matter and methods. Before Durkheim, the study of society was done by philosophers, historians, political economists, and early reformers, but there was no clearly defined field of sociology in most universities. Durkheim argued that society should be studied scientifically, using systematic methods, and that it had its own reality that could not be reduced to individual psychology or biology. His main contributions shaped several areas that remain central to sociology today. First, his idea of the social fact — that societies have their own reality beyond the individuals who make them up — gave sociology its distinctive subject matter. Second, his book Suicide showed that even an act that seems deeply individual follows social patterns, varying with levels of religious integration, family ties, and economic conditions. This was one of the first great pieces of empirical sociology, using statistics to reveal patterns that individual-level explanations could not capture. Third, his study of religion argued that religious practice is fundamentally about the bonds that hold societies together, and that even in secular societies, something functions like religion in producing social solidarity. Fourth, he studied how the division of labour in modern societies changes the nature of social solidarity, moving from the mechanical solidarity of small, similar communities to the organic solidarity of large, differentiated societies where people depend on each other through interlocking specialisations. His concept of anomie — the breakdown of moral guidance in rapidly changing societies — has been used to understand many modern problems from crime to mental health to political extremism. His methods and concepts have been revised and sometimes rejected by later sociologists, but almost every major sociological approach since his time has had to respond to what he established. His work is now studied worldwide and continues to generate research.

Key Ideas
1
Social facts
Durkheim's foundational idea was that societies have their own reality, separate from the reality of individuals. He called this reality social facts. A social fact is something that exists in a society and affects its members, but is not reducible to the thoughts or actions of any single person. Language is a social fact. No one person created English; no one person can change it by themselves; but it shapes how every English speaker thinks and talks. Laws, customs, moral beliefs, religious practices, and economic institutions are all social facts. They existed before you were born and will continue after you die. They constrain what you can do and shape what you think is normal. Durkheim argued that these social facts deserve their own science — sociology — because they cannot be fully explained by studying individuals alone. The approach gave sociology a distinctive subject matter and a clear direction for research.
2
Two kinds of solidarity
In The Division of Labour in Society (1893), Durkheim described two different ways that societies hold together. In small, traditional societies, most people do similar work, share similar beliefs, and live similar lives. The bond between them comes from their likeness. Durkheim called this mechanical solidarity — mechanical in the sense that the parts all look alike, like similar pieces of a machine. In large, modern societies, people do very different kinds of work. A farmer, a doctor, a teacher, and a software engineer live different lives and know different things. The bond between them comes from the fact that they need each other. The doctor needs food grown by the farmer; the farmer needs medical care from the doctor. Durkheim called this organic solidarity — organic because, like the organs of a body, the parts work together by being different. This distinction explained a major historical change. As societies grow and specialise, the basis of their unity shifts from shared likeness to mutual dependence.
3
Anomie
Anomie is one of Durkheim's most influential concepts. It refers to a condition in which a society's moral rules break down or no longer provide clear guidance. People no longer know what they are supposed to do or what they can expect from others. This produces a painful kind of freedom — freedom without direction. Durkheim argued that anomie was common in rapidly changing modern societies, where old norms had broken down but new ones had not yet taken their place. Anomie could contribute to many problems: higher crime rates, family breakdown, and even higher suicide rates, as he showed in his book Suicide. The concept has been widely used. It has been applied to economic crises, to immigrant communities caught between two cultures, to periods of political upheaval, and to many other situations where familiar moral guidance fails. Some later scholars have criticised the concept as too vague. Others have found it one of the most useful tools in sociology for naming a specific kind of social suffering.
Key Quotations
"A social fact is any way of acting, whether fixed or not, capable of exerting over the individual an external constraint."
— The Rules of Sociological Method, 1895
Durkheim is defining the central concept of his sociology. A social fact is something that exists in a society and shapes what people do, but is not itself reducible to individual behaviour. The two key features are that it exists outside any single individual and that it constrains individuals in some way. Language is a social fact — you did not create it, and you must use it in certain ways to be understood. Laws are social facts — you did not make them, and they affect what you can do. Customs are social facts — they tell you what is expected even when no law requires it. The definition gives sociology a specific subject matter. Sociology does not just study individuals; it studies the social realities that exist beyond any individual and that shape how individuals live. This was a new way of thinking about what sociology could be, and it has remained influential.
"When morals are sufficient, laws are unnecessary; when morals are insufficient, laws are unenforceable."
— Attributed to Durkheim, drawing on Division of Labour and other works
This compact sentence captures something important about Durkheim's view of how societies hold together. When a society has strong shared morals — when most people genuinely share the values that laws express — laws are needed less, because people behave well without having to be forced. When morals are weak — when the shared values have broken down — laws by themselves cannot fill the gap. Police, courts, and prisons can punish violations but cannot produce the underlying willingness to behave that makes social life possible. The insight explains why purely legal solutions to social problems often fail. If the moral basis is missing, legal enforcement becomes both harsher and less effective. Durkheim applied this view to the problems of his time and to the future challenges of modern societies, where traditional moral systems had weakened and new ones had not yet developed. The observation remains relevant wherever societies try to address social problems through law alone.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Scientific Thinking When examining whether society has its own reality
How to introduce
Ask students: does society exist? Some might say yes, some no, some uncertain. Push the question. You cannot see society as a single thing. You can only see individuals and their interactions. So is society real, or is it just a word we use for a group of individuals? Introduce Durkheim's argument. Society has its own reality that is more than the sum of individuals. Language is a good example. No one person created English; no one person can change it alone; it shapes how every English speaker thinks. Language is real in a way that cannot be reduced to any individual. Laws, customs, and shared beliefs work the same way. Discuss what follows from this. If society is real, it needs its own study. This is what Durkheim meant by founding sociology. Connect to the broader question of what kinds of things exist and how we should study them.
Scientific Thinking When examining how individual acts can follow social patterns
How to introduce
Present Durkheim's work on suicide. Suicide feels like the most individual and private of acts. Yet Durkheim showed that suicide rates follow clear social patterns. In his data, Protestant communities in some regions had higher rates than Catholic communities. Unmarried people had higher rates than married. Rates went up during both economic crashes and booms. Ask students: what does this show? Individual cases are always particular to the person. But when you look at large numbers, patterns appear that individual explanations cannot capture. The same applies to many other behaviours. Crime rates, divorce rates, voting patterns, school performance — all of these show social patterns that cannot be explained by individual factors alone. Discuss what this means for studying human behaviour. Sometimes the important things are visible only at the scale of groups, not of individuals. Connect to the broader skill of recognising when to look at individual cases and when to look at group patterns.
Further Reading

For a short introduction

Kenneth Thompson's Emile Durkheim (1982, Routledge) remains a reliable short introduction.

Anthony Giddens's Emile Durkheim

Selected Writings (1972, Cambridge) provides a useful selection of primary texts.

Steven Lukes's Emile Durkheim

His Life and Work (1973) is the standard biography and intellectual study.

Key Ideas
1
The study of suicide
In his 1897 book Suicide, Durkheim did something that had not been done before. He studied suicide as a social phenomenon rather than as an individual act. He gathered statistics from across Europe and looked for patterns. He found that suicide rates varied systematically by country, by religion, by marital status, by gender, by economic conditions. Protestants in certain regions had higher rates than Catholics. Unmarried people had higher rates than married people. Rates went up during both economic crashes and economic booms. These patterns could not be explained by individual psychology alone. They pointed to social causes. Durkheim identified different types of suicide based on their social causes — egoistic (from weak social integration), altruistic (from excessive integration), anomic (from normative breakdown), and fatalistic (from excessive regulation). The book was a landmark. It showed that what seemed like the most private act could be studied with statistical methods to reveal social patterns. It established the importance of empirical research in sociology and gave the field a model for how to study difficult topics.
2
Religion as social bond
In The Elementary Forms of Religious Life (1912), Durkheim argued that religion is fundamentally about the social bonds that hold a community together. He studied the traditional religions of Indigenous Australians because he thought these represented the most elementary forms of religion. He concluded that what the worshippers were really worshipping, through their ceremonies and beliefs, was their own society. The sacred things of a religion — totems, rituals, holy objects — represented the community in a form that could be seen and celebrated. When people came together for religious practice, they experienced a powerful collective feeling that bound them to each other. This analysis was bold. It was not intended to insult religion but to explain why religion matters so much to humans. Even in modern secular societies, Durkheim argued, something must play the role that religion had played — something that brings people together and creates the shared meanings that make society possible. The analysis has been much debated. It remains one of the most influential sociological accounts of religion.
3
Collective conscience and collective representations
Durkheim used two related terms that have been central to sociology. The collective conscience is the shared body of beliefs, values, and sentiments that members of a society have in common. It is more than the sum of individual minds. It has a reality of its own and shapes the individuals who grow up within it. Collective representations are the specific images, symbols, stories, and ideas through which a collective conscience expresses itself. A national flag is a collective representation. A religious symbol is a collective representation. Even ideas about what is normal or natural can be collective representations. These terms allowed Durkheim to talk about shared mental phenomena without reducing them to individual thoughts. They also allowed him to show how societies shape the minds of their members. What feels like your own private thought is often a collective representation you have absorbed from your society. Later sociology and anthropology have continued to develop these ideas, often under different names but with similar purposes.
Key Quotations
"Society is not a mere sum of individuals, but the system formed by their association represents a specific reality which has its own characteristics."
— The Rules of Sociological Method, 1895
Durkheim is stating one of his most influential claims. A society is more than its members added together. When people live and interact together over time, their association produces patterns, institutions, shared meanings, and forces that belong to the group rather than to any individual. This extra reality — the society itself — has its own characteristics that need to be studied on their own terms. The position has consequences. It argues against the view that you can understand a society by studying individual psychology alone. It argues against the view that a society is just a collection of independent agents. And it defends the need for a specific science — sociology — to study the level of reality that emerges when humans associate. The position has been debated throughout sociology's history. Some scholars have thought Durkheim gave too much independent reality to society; others have thought he got the balance right. Either way, the question he raised remains fundamental to the field.
"The idea of society is the soul of religion."
— The Elementary Forms of Religious Life, 1912
Durkheim is stating the central claim of his sociology of religion. What religion is really about, at its deepest level, is the society that practises it. The gods, rituals, and sacred objects of a religion are symbolic forms in which the society represents itself to its members. When people worship together, they experience the power of their collective life as something greater than any individual. The feeling is real; it is also social in origin. This view was not intended to dismiss religion as an illusion. Durkheim thought it explained why religion has been so important across human history. Religion works because it speaks to a real human need for collective meaning and shared identity. Even in secular societies, he argued, something must fill the function that religion has filled — some way of producing the shared sense of belonging that societies need. The analysis has been influential and controversial. Religious believers have often rejected the reduction of religion to its social function. Social scientists have found the account productive even when they disagreed with it.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When examining what holds societies together
How to introduce
Present Durkheim's two types of solidarity. In small, traditional societies, people are held together by being similar — sharing beliefs, work, and way of life. He called this mechanical solidarity. In large, modern societies, people are held together by being different but needing each other — through the division of labour. He called this organic solidarity. Ask students: which kind holds their society together? Most modern societies have elements of both. A country like Britain or France has enormous diversity (organic solidarity) but also shared language and some shared history (mechanical solidarity). Discuss what happens when both kinds of solidarity weaken. People feel neither like each other nor mutually dependent. This is close to what Durkheim called anomie. Consider how globalisation, migration, and economic change affect the balance between the two forms of solidarity. Connect to contemporary debates about social cohesion.
Ethical Thinking When examining the role of shared moral values
How to introduce
Introduce Durkheim's observation that when morals are sufficient, laws are unnecessary, and when morals are insufficient, laws are unenforceable. Ask students: is this true? Discuss examples. In communities with strong shared values, people often behave well without needing formal rules. Neighbours watch each other's children, help with minor emergencies, and keep things orderly without police involvement. In communities where shared values have broken down, even strong legal systems struggle to maintain order. More police, harsher penalties, and more prisons do not by themselves produce the underlying willingness to behave that social life requires. Consider the implications. If shared values matter so much, how are they built or rebuilt? Schools, religious communities, civic organisations, and families have all been suggested as sources. Connect to the broader question of what role law, education, religion, and community should play in sustaining a society.
Critical Thinking When examining what religion does in society
How to introduce
Present Durkheim's argument that religion is fundamentally about the social bonds of a community — that what worshippers are really responding to is their own society in symbolic form. Ask students: does this fit what they observe? Discuss what religions actually do. They bring people together regularly. They produce shared feelings during collective ritual. They provide symbols that represent the community to itself. They generate moral expectations that members share. All of this is social. The question is whether this is all religion does, or whether it also does something else — connecting believers to a reality beyond the social. Durkheim's view was that the social function is primary. Many religious believers would disagree. Consider how Durkheim's account applies to modern secular societies. Sports events, national ceremonies, political rallies all seem to do some of what religion does. Has religion been replaced, displaced, or transformed? Connect to broader questions about collective meaning in modern life.
Further Reading

Durkheim's major books are all available in good English translations. The Division of Labour in Society, The Rules of Sociological Method, Suicide, and The Elementary Forms of Religious Life are all worth reading. For the intellectual context: William S. F. Pickering's Durkheim's Sociology of Religion (1984) is a detailed treatment. The journal Durkheimian Studies publishes continuing scholarship.

Key Ideas
1
Normality and pathology in societies
Durkheim made a distinctive argument about what is normal in a society. He argued that some things we call problems — such as crime — are actually normal. A society without any crime has never existed and probably cannot exist. Crime serves a function: it draws lines around what is unacceptable and strengthens the reaction against it. A society without crime would have to be a society without any diversity of belief or behaviour — which no complex society is. This does not mean every level of crime is healthy. Durkheim argued that a society becomes pathological when its levels of crime, suicide, or other problems go beyond what is normal for its type. The distinction between normal and pathological levels gave Durkheim a way to evaluate societies without imposing his own moral preferences. It was also controversial. Some critics thought it made Durkheim too accepting of existing arrangements. Others found it a useful correction to approaches that treated all social problems as simple failures to be eliminated.
2
The scientific study of morality
Durkheim believed that sociology could study morality scientifically. He did not mean that sociology could tell people what is right and wrong. He meant that sociology could describe the moral systems of different societies, explain how they develop and change, and identify what functions they serve. Every society has a moral system. The specific content varies — what is forbidden in one society may be permitted in another — but the existence of morality is a universal human fact. Durkheim argued that morality is not a private matter but a social one. It emerges from the collective life of a community and serves to make cooperation possible. He thought that modern societies were going through a moral crisis because their traditional moralities were breaking down faster than new ones were forming. Part of the task of sociology, he believed, was to help modern societies develop the kind of morality they needed. This was an ambitious vision for sociology. Later scholars have sometimes thought it was too ambitious, mixing description with prescription in ways that are hard to justify. The vision nonetheless shaped what Durkheim and his students tried to do.
3
The Durkheimian school
Durkheim did not work alone. He built a group of brilliant younger scholars around his journal L'Année Sociologique. The group included his nephew Marcel Mauss, who produced influential work on gift exchange and magic; the philosopher Maurice Halbwachs, who developed the sociology of collective memory; Robert Hertz, who studied the symbolism of death and of the right and left hand before dying young in the First World War; Henri Hubert, who co-authored important essays with Mauss; and many others. Together they applied Durkheim's approach across a wide range of topics. The First World War devastated the school. Several of its brightest members were killed at the Front, including Durkheim's own son. The school never fully recovered. But its surviving members, especially Mauss, continued to produce major work, and the Durkheimian approach influenced anthropology, sociology, and history across the twentieth century. Claude Lévi-Strauss, the most important French anthropologist of the mid-twentieth century, was deeply shaped by Mauss and through him by Durkheim. The lineage continues to shape French social science today.
Key Quotations
"Man cannot become attached to higher aims and submit to a rule if he sees nothing above him to which he belongs."
— Suicide, 1897
Durkheim is making a specific psychological and social claim. Humans need to feel attached to something larger than themselves. Without such attachment, they cannot sustain high purposes or accept the limits that any decent life requires. This claim is central to his analysis of egoistic suicide — suicide caused by isolation from meaningful community. People who are disconnected from family, religious community, or broader society lose the sense that their life matters beyond their own concerns. This loss can be fatal. The claim also has wider implications. It suggests that the atomising tendencies of modern societies — where individuals are treated as self-sufficient units — are dangerous for human flourishing. People need communities; they need shared meanings; they need to feel they belong. When societies fail to provide these, the consequences show up not only in suicide rates but in many other problems. The insight has been confirmed by much subsequent research on loneliness, community, and health. Durkheim's way of stating it remains compelling.
"The first and fundamental rule is: consider social facts as things."
— The Rules of Sociological Method, 1895
Durkheim is giving his most famous methodological instruction. Sociology should treat social facts the way natural sciences treat physical things. This means observing them carefully, describing them accurately, looking for regular patterns, and seeking explanations that could be tested against evidence. It means resisting the temptation to explain social phenomena by appealing to what they feel like from the inside or to what the people involved think they are doing. The rule has been important and controversial. Supporters have argued that it makes sociology possible as a rigorous field; without treating social facts as objects of study, sociology collapses into commentary. Critics have argued that social reality is not really like physical things — it depends on what people mean by their actions, and reducing it to observable patterns loses what is distinctive about human life. The debate continues. Most sociologists probably think that Durkheim's rule was a useful correction to loose thinking but that the picture needs to be complicated. Social facts are not exactly things, but they are not pure subjective experiences either.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When examining the idea of anomie
How to introduce
Introduce Durkheim's concept of anomie — the state of a society in which shared moral rules have broken down or no longer provide clear guidance. Ask students: can they think of situations in their own experience of anomie? Periods of rapid change often produce something like it — people no longer know what is expected, what is normal, what rules apply. The experience can be painful. Durkheim argued that anomie contributes to many problems: crime, addiction, family breakdown, mental distress, even suicide. Consider how this framework applies to contemporary situations. Major economic transitions, migration, rapid technological change, and the decline of traditional communities all produce anomic conditions. The concept also has limits. Not every transition produces anomie; sometimes people find new sources of meaning. Connect to the broader question of how individuals and societies cope with loss of familiar frameworks.
Research Skills When examining the use of statistics in studying humans
How to introduce
Tell students that Durkheim's book Suicide (1897) was one of the first major works of sociology to use statistics to study human behaviour. He gathered data from many European countries and found patterns that individual-level explanations could not capture. Ask: what are the strengths and limits of this approach? Discuss the strengths. Statistics can reveal patterns that are invisible at the individual level. They make comparisons possible across time and place. They let researchers test whether claimed causes actually produce the effects expected. Discuss the limits. Statistics show patterns but not why specific individuals act as they do. They depend on how the data was gathered, which often reflects the assumptions of those who gathered it. They can be misread to support conclusions the data does not actually justify. Connect to the broader skill of evaluating research. Statistical studies are valuable when used carefully and misleading when used carelessly. Distinguishing the two is a key skill.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Durkheim believed that individuals do not matter, only societies do.

What to teach instead

Durkheim emphasised that societies have their own reality beyond individuals, but he did not dismiss individuals. He was deeply concerned with how society affects individual lives — how isolation contributes to suicide, how meaningful work matters for human flourishing, how individuals develop through their participation in communities. His point was that you cannot understand individuals without understanding the societies they live in, not that individuals do not matter. In fact, one of his central concerns was how modern societies could protect individual dignity while also providing the collective meaning that humans need. He defended the Jewish captain Dreyfus in the famous Dreyfus Affair, arguing that individual justice mattered even when it was unpopular. Presenting Durkheim as anti-individual misreads his position. He thought individuals and societies are both real and that understanding each requires understanding both.

Common misconception

Durkheim's sociology of religion shows that religion is just an illusion.

What to teach instead

Durkheim's claim that religion is fundamentally social was not meant to dismiss religion as false. He argued that religion works because it addresses real human needs — for collective meaning, shared identity, and attachment to something larger than oneself. These needs are not illusions; they are genuine features of human social life. Durkheim thought religion had been enormously important in human history precisely because it met these needs. His analysis separates the social function of religion from questions about whether specific religious beliefs are literally true. Religious believers can disagree with his account while recognising that he took religion seriously as a human phenomenon. Reading him as simply debunking religion misses the respectful character of his engagement with it. He thought even secular societies would need something that performs religion's social functions, whether or not they kept traditional religious beliefs.

Common misconception

Durkheim was a political conservative who defended existing social arrangements.

What to teach instead

Durkheim's actual politics were more complex than this suggests. He was a Third Republic liberal and socialist sympathiser who believed that modern societies needed significant reform. He supported Dreyfus during the Dreyfus Affair, which placed him firmly on the left-liberal side of the major political division of his time. He favoured progressive income tax, the extension of education, and the regulation of inheritance. He also valued social order and worried about the moral instability of rapid change, which has given him a reputation for conservatism in some quarters. The combination — support for reform and concern about the loss of stable values — does not fit easily onto a simple left-right spectrum. His concern about anomie was not an argument against change but a recognition that change needs to produce new moral bearings as well as dissolving old ones. Reducing him to either left or right misses the actual shape of his thought.

Common misconception

Durkheim's theory of suicide fully explains modern suicide rates.

What to teach instead

Durkheim's work on suicide was pioneering but should not be treated as the final word on the subject. Later research has refined, qualified, and sometimes challenged his findings. Modern suicide research draws on psychology, neuroscience, and clinical medicine in ways that were not available to Durkheim. Some of his specific claims — such as the comparison between Protestant and Catholic suicide rates in his data — have been questioned. The statistical data available in the nineteenth century was less reliable than modern data, and some of Durkheim's patterns may have been artefacts of how data was gathered rather than real social patterns. What remains valuable is his basic insight that suicide has social dimensions that individual psychology alone cannot capture. Modern suicide prevention work takes this seriously, including factors like social isolation, economic insecurity, and community cohesion. Treating Durkheim's specific conclusions as definitive overstates what was possible with the evidence available to him.

Intellectual Connections
In Dialogue With
Max Weber
Durkheim and Weber are usually paired as the two great founders of modern sociology, working in France and Germany respectively around the same time. They approached the field differently. Durkheim emphasised social facts as objects to be studied with scientific methods; Weber emphasised the need to understand the meanings that people attach to their actions. Durkheim focused on how societies hold together; Weber focused on how rationalisation was transforming modern life. Despite these differences, both thinkers shared a commitment to taking society seriously as an object of rigorous study. Neither knew the other's work well during their lifetimes. Reading them together shows how sociology emerged as a field through parallel but different efforts that later sociologists have drawn on in combination.
Anticipates
Pierre Bourdieu
Bourdieu worked within the French sociological tradition that Durkheim had founded and that had continued through Marcel Mauss and others. Bourdieu's core concepts — habitus, cultural capital, fields — develop Durkheimian themes in new directions. The Durkheimian attention to how society shapes individuals becomes, in Bourdieu, detailed study of how specific social positions produce specific dispositions. The Durkheimian attention to shared symbols becomes, in Bourdieu, analysis of how cultural goods serve as markers of class. Bourdieu was explicit about his debt to the Durkheimian lineage. Reading them together shows how a tradition in social theory can develop across generations, with later scholars addressing questions their predecessors raised but could not fully answer.
Develops
Marcus Aurelius
This may seem a distant connection, but there is substance. Marcus Aurelius, writing in second-century Rome, developed a Stoic view of how individuals should understand themselves as parts of a larger order. Durkheim, nearly two thousand years later, developed a sociological view of how individuals are shaped by the societies they belong to. The two views are not the same, but they share a commitment to seeing individuals as essentially connected to something larger than themselves. Both also worried about how to maintain meaningful life in periods when traditional certainties had weakened. Reading them together shows how the question of how individuals relate to larger wholes has been central to serious thought across many traditions, and how different frameworks have addressed it.
Complements
Franz Boas
Boas, the founder of modern American anthropology, worked at the same time as Durkheim on related problems. Both insisted that cultural and social phenomena needed their own scientific study, separate from biology and individual psychology. Both produced detailed empirical work alongside theoretical statements. Both influenced the development of their disciplines for generations. The differences are real. Boas was more focused on specific cultural differences and on the critique of racial hierarchies; Durkheim was more focused on the general principles of social life. Reading them together shows how the social sciences were being built in different countries in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, often without direct contact but addressing related questions.
In Dialogue With
Karl Marx
Durkheim is often contrasted with Marx, whose work preceded his and whom he knew of. Marx focused on class conflict, economic exploitation, and revolutionary change. Durkheim focused on social integration, shared values, and the conditions for social order. The two emphases produce different sociologies — one centred on conflict, the other on cohesion. Durkheim took Marx seriously but thought Marx had overemphasised economic factors and underemphasised the moral and symbolic dimensions of social life. Marx was more sceptical of any society's claims to shared values, seeing them as often serving dominant interests. Reading them together shows the classical debate in sociology between conflict-focused and integration-focused approaches, a debate that continues to shape the field.
Influenced
Claude Lévi-Strauss
Lévi-Strauss, the most important French anthropologist of the mid-twentieth century, was deeply influenced by the Durkheimian tradition, especially through Marcel Mauss, Durkheim's nephew and closest collaborator. Lévi-Strauss's structural anthropology developed Durkheimian themes about collective representations and the symbolic dimensions of social life in new directions. He drew on linguistic structuralism to give these themes formal treatment. The lineage runs Durkheim to Mauss to Lévi-Strauss, and through Lévi-Strauss to much of later twentieth-century French thought. Reading them together shows how ideas travel through specific intellectual genealogies, with each generation transforming what it received. Durkheim would have recognised Lévi-Strauss as part of his tradition even though the specific methods differ substantially.
Further Reading

For scholarly depth

Philippe Besnard's edited collection The Sociological Domain: The Durkheimians and the Founding of French Sociology (1983) is important. Robert Alun Jones's The Development of Durkheim's Social Realism (1999) is a major modern interpretation. For the Durkheimian school beyond Durkheim himself: Marcel Fournier's biography of Mauss and the work on other Durkheimians by various scholars extends the tradition.

Anne Warfield Rawls's Epistemology and Practice

Durkheim's Elementary Forms of Religious Life (2004) offers an important recent reading.