At my departure for anthropological fieldwork in the Central African Republic (RCA), just after Girard's seminal work La Violence et le sacré had come to upset my structuralist tutors in Paris, I was given a list of penetrating questions to probe in the field, since my research was to be conducted in an area known for its a-cephalous traditions with little or no political or religious centralization.1 The prime critique concerned Girard's apparent return to a bluntly utilitarian vision of myth and religion as the mental framework of society's ritual foundations, in line with Durkheim's functionalist analysis of archaic religion, which was finely reworded in Lord Raglan's recent preface to a cluster of Hocart's articles titled The Life-Giving Myth.2 The approach had come to dominate, as a way of unraveling outdated transcendentalist claims, and also underpinned Freudian and Marxist attacks on religion. After Kant's Critique of Pure Reason...
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May 01 2023
Sacrificial “As-If” and Avuncular Hilarity: Living by Méconnaissance
Contagion: Journal of Violence Mimesis and Culture (2023) 30: 69–102.
Citation
Wiel Eggen; Sacrificial “As-If” and Avuncular Hilarity: Living by Méconnaissance. Contagion: Journal of Violence Mimesis and Culture 1 May 2023; 30 69–102. doi: https://doi.org/10.14321/contagion.30.0069
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