René Girard

Wolfgang Palaver
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Abstract

René Noël Théophile Girard (b. 25 December 1923 in Avignon, d. 4 November 2015 in Stanford) was a French-American cultural anthropologist who discovered in the works of European novelists like Cervantes, Flaubert, Stendhal, Proust, and Dostoevsky the important impact of imitative desire on human relations. This insight became the basis for his mimetic theory, an anthropological approach that has not only helped to interpret literature, but has also become a theoretical tool to understand the development of human culture and particularly the role of religion in it. By distinguishing between the sacred of early religions and the holy as the core of the Judeo-Christian tradition, mimetic theory provides a theory of religion that contributes also to a better understanding of the post-Axial religions. Mimetic theory, however, reaches far beyond literature and religion, as its application in fields like anthropology, psychology, theology, and history as well as political and economic theory shows. Similar to the broad outreach of mimetic theory, also Girard himself entered many different scholarly disciplines. He studied medieval and modern history before he entered fields like literary criticism, religious and classical studies, and biblical literature. In 1947, he graduated with a dissertation on marriage and private life in 15th-century Avignon as an archiviste-paléographe from the École des Chartes in Paris. Soon afterward, he left for the United States to study contemporary history at Indiana University, where he received his PhD with a dissertation on “American Opinion on France, 1940–1943” in 1950. After working as an instructor of French literature at Duke University (1952) and as an assistant professor at Bryn Mawr College (1953–1957), he held professorships at Johns Hopkins University (1957–1968; 1976–1981), in the Department of English at SUNY Buffalo (1986–1976), and finally at Stanford University (1981–1995). He received honorary degrees and awards from many different universities and academic institutions and was elected in 2005 to the Académie française. His mimetic theory consists mainly of four stages: (1) mimetic desire as he discovered it in great literature; (2) the scapegoat mechanism as the origin of human culture and early religions; (3) his theory of religion, which distinguishes between the sacred of early religions and the holiness that characterized the Judeo-Christian tradition; and (4) finally his apocalyptic view of history, which started with a chapter on Dostoevsky in his first book and culminated in his reflections on Clausewitz’s theory of war in his last book.
ren Noël thacimophile Girard(1923年12月25日生于阿维尼昂,2015年11月4日生于斯坦福)是一位法裔美国文化人类学家,他在塞万提斯、福福拜、司丹达、普鲁斯特和陀思妥耶夫斯基等欧洲小说家的作品中发现了模仿欲望对人类关系的重要影响。这一见解成为他模仿理论的基础,这是一种人类学方法,不仅有助于解释文学,而且也成为理解人类文化发展的理论工具,特别是宗教在其中的作用。通过区分早期宗教的神圣性和作为犹太教-基督教传统核心的神圣性,模仿理论提供了一种宗教理论,也有助于更好地理解后轴心宗教。然而,模仿理论远远超出了文学和宗教的范畴,正如它在人类学、心理学、神学、历史以及政治和经济理论等领域的应用所显示的那样。与模仿学的广泛扩展类似,吉拉德本人也进入了许多不同的学术学科。在进入文学批评、宗教和古典研究以及圣经文学等领域之前,他学习了中世纪和近代史。1947年,作为巴黎École des Chartes博物馆的档案保管员,他毕业时拿到了一篇关于15世纪阿维尼翁婚姻和私人生活的论文。不久之后,他前往美国印第安纳大学学习当代史,并于1950年获得博士学位,论文题目是《1940-1943年美国人对法国的看法》。1952年在杜克大学担任法国文学讲师,1953年至1957年在布林莫尔学院担任助理教授,1957年至1968年在约翰霍普金斯大学担任教授;1976-1981),在纽约州立大学布法罗分校英语系(1986-1976),最后在斯坦福大学(1981-1995)。他获得了许多不同大学和学术机构的荣誉学位和奖项,并于2005年当选为法国科学院院士。他的模仿理论主要包括四个阶段:(1)模仿欲望,这是他在伟大的文学作品中发现的;(2)替罪羊机制是人类文化和早期宗教的起源;(3)他的宗教理论,区分了早期宗教的神圣性和犹太-基督教传统的神圣性;(4)最后,他对历史的启示观,在他的第一本书中以陀思妥耶夫斯基的一章开始,在他的最后一本书中以对克劳塞维茨战争理论的反思为高潮。
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