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René Girard

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René Girard is a French historian, literary critic, and philosopher of social science. His work belongs to the tradition of philosophical anthropology. He is the author of several books (see below), developing the idea that human culture is based on a sacrifice as the way out of mimetic, or imitative, violence between rivals. His writing covers anthropology, theology and literature, as well as philosophy. His work tends to be very controversial due to his harsh criticisms of modern philosophy and his outspoken Christian perspective. He focuses on three main ideas: (1) mimetic desire, (2) the scapegoat mechanism, (3) the Bible's unveiling of 1 and 2.

His thought

His best known works are "Violence and the Sacred" which explains the relations between myths and violence, and "Things Hidden since the Foundation of the World", in which he develops the particular relation between Judeo-Christianity (which he considers the destruction of myth), violence, and the development of Western civilization. The dichotomy he sees between myths and Judeo-Christianity is based on his claim that mythological narratives are based on the tendency to scapegoat. Girard claims that myths are records of actual events in which misfortunes were blamed on innocents, who were then murdered as a punishment; the story of the murder became a myth, which perpetuated the violence by reinforcing the tendency to scapegoat. Judeo-Christianity, on the contrary, seeks to counteract this tendency, asserting the innocence of the scapegoat. Myths mask the mechanism of victimization by asserting the guilt of the accused person (e.g. "Oedipus really did commit parricide and incest"), while Judeo-Christianity attempts to reveal the function of the victim (scapegoat) in mimetic desire, and thus restore the truth: the accused person is innocent (Job, whom the Bible depicts as an innocent man, is falsely accused by his "friends" of being responsible for the misfortunes that befall him).

-This theory of desire can be applied to the Oedipus complex: the child does not desire his mother so much as want to imitate his father. That is, it is because the son must imitate the father "completely" that he will inevitably desire the mother (on the condition that the father desires — or seems to desire — the mother).
-Society exorcises this threat of violence through sacrifice. It can exist only by reference to a common enemy, a unifying victim, a scapegoat. So it is not the father who is put to death (as Freud's Totem and Taboo claims), but rather a unifying victim.
-So the mechanism of begetting the social is neither economic (Marx), nor sexual (Freud), but religious (Durkheim).
In his latest work, Les origines de la culture, he goes even further by saying that mimetic desire (and its corollary, the device of the scapegoat) are at the origin of the development of humanity via a double principle of natural selection:

Life and career

René Girard was born in the southern French city of Avignon on December 25, 1923. Between 1943 and 1947, he studied medieval history in Paris at the École des Chartes. In 1947 he went to Indiana University on a year's fellowship and eventually made almost his entire career in the United States. He completed a PhD in history at Indiana University in 1950 but also began to teach literature, the field in which he would first make his reputation as a literary critic by publishing influential essays on such authors as Albert Camus and Marcel Proust. He taught at Duke University and at Bryn Mawr before becoming a professor at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore. Moving back and forth between Buffalo and Johns Hopkins, he finished his academic career at Stanford University where he taught between 1981 and his retirement in 1995.

He is Honorary Chair of the Colloquium on Violence and Religion and was elected to the Académie Française, the highest rank for French intellectuals, on March 17, 2005.

The work of Rene Girard has been extended into numerous academic disciplines. Perhaps the best source for tracking the continued scholarship that operates within a Girardian framework is through the website maintained by the Colloquium on Violence and Religion [link].

Bibliography

Books about Girard

References

External links

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