Abstract
The Romanian exodus generically called “Romanian migration” represents one of the recent episodes of contemporary history and, at the same time, one of the most tragic in terms of the collective destiny of the Romanian nation. This material offers the reader a sociological perspective on how the essence of societal life and social will has been directed or removed from the natural boundaries of the state. The Romanian migration phenomenon is nothing more than a consequence of allowing too long a nation’s destiny to be taken care of by a superimposed elites. Explain how the superimposed elites affected, slowly but surely, the adaptability of Romanian society to the historical changes that came over our will. In order to draw attention and highlight the main problems, we will try to offer an autochthonous perspective of how the “superimposed elites” (Mihai Eminescu) affected the very essence of societal life, the “social will” (Dimitrie Gusti), a fact that created at the national level a major “imbalance”, understood from the perspective of the “law of sociological parallelism” (Dimitrie Gusti). In an apparently negative perspective, we would like to mention that this phenomenon is, at the same time, part of a process typical of a “heroic culture” (Ilie Bădescu), whose outcome, without a sovereign autochthonous elite, is known only to divine providence.
Choose a citation style

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.