What is a clique and why is it bad?
Sep. 1st, 2003 09:49 am(friends-only, not filtered)
Have you ever been accused of being part of a clique? Were you? Were you or the other "clique" members doing something unethical, and if so what? Have you seen others behave like a clique in a way that was unethical? What was it about their behaviour that was unethical?
Everyone has preferences about what sort of people they want to be friends with. There's a good chance your friends have preferences more similar to yours than a random member of the population. Thus a circle of friends can form of people whose preferences have common elements.
If you'd like to hang out with that circle, but you don't fit the common preferences, you may feel they are excluding you, and behaving like a clique. This isn't necessarily so; it's an inevitable part of friendship groups forming that not everyone can join.
So what makes a clique different from any other circle of friends? I tried the dictionary without much enlightenment.
My first guess is that you become a clique when being part of the circle makes you feel so special that you don't want *anyone* new to join, no matter how close they are to the sort of people you might like to know, because that reduces the feeling of specialness. However, if the membership of your group can grow as well as shrink, it's less likely to be a clique.
My second guess is that if you're in a situation of forced contact with others, such as a school or workplace, a clique is a group within that forced contact group who get daily or near-daily opportunities to make it clear to outsiders, in a way they cannot avoid, that they are not part of the clique. Thus, if we start to see LiveJournal as a forced-contact situation, we will start to perceive every circle of friends as a clique; it's important to remember that there are a million people on LJ and we each have the power to choose whose journals we read.
It's possible I'm missing something. Please enlighten me!
PS first day of work today, I may not get back to this LJ for a while.
Have you ever been accused of being part of a clique? Were you? Were you or the other "clique" members doing something unethical, and if so what? Have you seen others behave like a clique in a way that was unethical? What was it about their behaviour that was unethical?
Everyone has preferences about what sort of people they want to be friends with. There's a good chance your friends have preferences more similar to yours than a random member of the population. Thus a circle of friends can form of people whose preferences have common elements.
If you'd like to hang out with that circle, but you don't fit the common preferences, you may feel they are excluding you, and behaving like a clique. This isn't necessarily so; it's an inevitable part of friendship groups forming that not everyone can join.
So what makes a clique different from any other circle of friends? I tried the dictionary without much enlightenment.
My first guess is that you become a clique when being part of the circle makes you feel so special that you don't want *anyone* new to join, no matter how close they are to the sort of people you might like to know, because that reduces the feeling of specialness. However, if the membership of your group can grow as well as shrink, it's less likely to be a clique.
My second guess is that if you're in a situation of forced contact with others, such as a school or workplace, a clique is a group within that forced contact group who get daily or near-daily opportunities to make it clear to outsiders, in a way they cannot avoid, that they are not part of the clique. Thus, if we start to see LiveJournal as a forced-contact situation, we will start to perceive every circle of friends as a clique; it's important to remember that there are a million people on LJ and we each have the power to choose whose journals we read.
It's possible I'm missing something. Please enlighten me!
PS first day of work today, I may not get back to this LJ for a while.
no subject
Date: 2003-09-01 03:06 am (UTC)At school, I ended up friends with a girl, because we were both bottom of the pecking-order. But we only had a few things in common, & her mother used to do things like bring her to my house, all day every day during the summer holidays, & it began to put a real strain on our friendship. We were just thrown together, really.
Over the years, I became more 'accepted' by the other girls, while she was still left out, & finally, in lower sixth, I was hanging about with the 'cool' girls who hardly spoke to her, & I stopped spending time with her altogether.
At first, I stuck up for her if the others teased her, but later I know I really just said nothing & moved on. Eventually they grew out of teasing her.
In one sense, I feel bad for ditching my friend, but in another sense, I know we no longer had anything in common, & nothing much to say to eachother by the time I ended up in the 'clique'.
And as I was a complete social outcast in the school for so many years, I was pretty fucking glad that now anyone would talk to me, despite being rather a 'class clown' now, instead of 'class freak'.
Cliques. Horrid. But it happens, at least among children. Among adults, I find it mildly disturbing.