Definition of "anomie"
anomie
noun
countable and uncountable, plural anomies
Alienation or social instability caused by erosion of standards and values.
Quotations
This is in line with sociologist Emile Durkheim's seminal study Suicide (1897 ), which argued that "anomie", or normlessness, could explain variations in suicide rates across countries and time.
2019, Kathryn Edin, Timothy Nelson, Andrew Cherlin, Robert Francis, “The Tenuous Attachments of Working-Class Men”, in Journal of Economic Perspectives
Although the hypotheses on what causes anomie are different and reflect the social conditions of different societies, the concept itself refers to the same idea/phenomenon: a weakening of the guiding power of social norms, a loosened social control.
2020, Freda Adler, The Legacy of Anomie Theory, Routledge
In fact, one of the recurrent themes in all Didion’s books, both fiction and nonfiction, is Americans’ penchant for reinventing themselves, their belief in fresh starts and second acts — a faith, on the one hand, that helped settle this country and fueled the American dream, and yet, on the other, has resulted in rootlessness and anomie, the discarding of personal and public history.
2021 December 24, Michiko Kakutani, “Didion’s Prophetic Eye on America”, in The New York Times
[T]hey duly make the acquaintance of all the dysfunctional, boorish and anomie-stricken super-rich on board, including a hateful elderly Brit couple with the Churchillian names of Winston and Clementine
2022 May 21, Peter Bradshaw, “Triangle of Sadness review – heavy-handed satire on the super-rich loses its shape”, in The Guardian