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Secret Societies 

Just a bunch of people getting together, doing stuff, and then not telling other people about it
I heard that Jeffrey's in the Knights Templar 2, it's one of those secret societies.

Gregarian Societies 

From the word gregarious "living in contiguous nests but not forming a true colony".

In the post MySpace era, where user blogs are the new web page, there will be all these small colonies of users with similar interests congregate but basically form clicks rather than communities.
Gregarian Societies are people who form clicks or groups around similar interests within forums or social networking sites. These can be seen in a Bands friends list, or TV Show's profile on a social network like MySpace or Facebook, and also in MeetUp groups.

Smaller groups or subgroups of like minded people in online communities or social networking sites.

If you were at a Band's/TV show's MySpace profile and you were viewing the band's friends, the group of friends/fans of that band are a Gregarian Society.

Individuals & Societies 

The fancy subject name for history.
Individuals & Societies is so boring.

Publisher's Societies of America 

also called Cult of the GAays, they never consult anyone but their own, cult of publishers so it was this that formed wikipedia to start and left alone commit horrendous atrocities but their name implied fascism to start because the society was on the distribution controls of what others, authors and writers, have said.
2. the arch enemies of Mark Twain, all
"Over arking, phrase Publisher's Societies of America he's talking about, like the Tom Sayer 1973 movie they did, it was theirs,
there once was a Time when things like polution, overpopulation, even things like income taxes were unknown to most people, our natural riches seemed inaexhaustable, there was more elbow room, and life was a lot more fun, now, reader's digest, together with the united artists and arthur p jacobs, invites you and your family, to go back to those golden days, as we proudly present Tom Sawyer" Arthur P Jacobs, Reader's Digest, Artists United.

Theory of Constructed Societies

The argument that "society" is not just a collection of people in a place, but a complex, fragile construct held together by shared fictions—laws, money, norms, and identities. It's a giant game where everyone agrees to follow certain rules and believe in certain concepts (like citizenship or contracts), and the game completely falls apart if enough people stop believing and participating.
Example: "A traffic jam at a red light with no police in sight is the Theory of Constructed Societies in action. The red light itself is just a colored bulb. The 'rule' it represents is a pure construction. Our collective decision to obey that fiction, even when we could run it, is what keeps the social order from collapsing into chaos. Society is a group project of pretending abstract rules are real."

Theory of Concrete and Imaginary Societies

A macro-level analysis of social organization. A Concrete Society refers to the actual, on-the-ground network of institutions, class structures, and power relations in a specific place and time—messy, unequal, and operational. An Imaginary Society is the theoretical model used to describe or justify it: "a classless society," "a free market society," "a colorblind society." These are aspirational or ideological blueprints that never fully match the concrete reality but powerfully guide policy, revolution, and social critique.
Theory of Concrete and Imaginary Societies Example: The Concrete Society of a country is its documented wealth gap, its legal system's biases, and its actual social mobility rates. Its Imaginary Society is the "land of equal opportunity" enshrined in its founding documents and political speeches. The relentless tension between the concrete facts and the imaginary ideal is the engine of social conflict, reform, and disillusionment.