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Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World

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Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World

By: René Girard
Narrated by: Mike Fraser
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An astonishing work of cultural criticism, this book is widely recognized as a brilliant and devastating challenge to conventional views of literature, anthropology, religion, and psychoanalysis. In its scope and interest it can be compared with Freud's Totem and Taboo, the subtext Girard refutes with polemic daring, vast erudition, and a persuasiveness that leaves the listener compelled to respond, one way or another.

This is the single fullest summation of Girard's ideas to date, the book by which they will stand or fall. In a dialogue with two psychiatrists (Jean-Michel Oughourlian and Guy Lefort), Girard probes an encyclopedic array of topics, ranging across the entire spectrum of anthropology, psychoanalysis, and cultural production.

Girard's point of departure is what he calls mimesis, the conflict that arises when human rivals compete to differentiate themselves from each other, yet succeed only in becoming more and more alike. At certain points in the life of a society, according to Girard, this mimetic conflict erupts into a crisis in which all difference dissolves in indiscriminate violence. In primitive societies, such crises were resolved by the scapegoating mechanism, in which the community, en masse, turned on an unpremeditated victim. The repression of this collective murder and its repetition in ritual sacrifice then formed the foundations of both religion and the restored social order

The book is not merely, or perhaps not mainly, biblical exegesis, for within its scope fall some of the most vexing problems of social history: the paradox that violence has social efficacy, the function of the scapegoat, the mechanism of anti-semitism.

Produced and published by Echo Point Books & Media, an independent bookseller in Brattleboro, Vermont.

©1978, 1987 Éditions Grasset & Fasquelle; translation copyright by The Athlone Press (P)2024 Echo Point Books & Media, LLC
Literary History & Criticism Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Social Sciences

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Very comprehensive

I listened to I See Satan Fall Like Lightning a few times last month, and I wanted to deepen my understanding. I certainly wasn't disappointed, although I think to do it justice I'll need to listen to this too quite a few times.

It's been 20 years since I last read anything so academic. I think the distance is helpful for me. I suppose I'm coming from the perspective now (having for many years modelled myself after Nietzsche as a radical antichrist) of wanting to hear a perspective that can rescue the world from its postmodern malaise.

I've spent the last three years reading the writings of the saints, and I'm now convinced that there is a great deal of profound wisdom to be found, and it's possible for anyone to find the eyes to see this.

Girard's work offers to me an enticing possibility of showing this to many more people, in a way that engages actively with current modes of thinking.

I'm particularly interested in the possibilities this book points to for a new psychology or psychotherapy that can drag itself out of the depths that the largely atheist and hubristic founders of modern psychology have left us in. I'm looking for more on this.

In sum, it's not an easy read, and you have to want to understand it (or at least learn as much as you can from it) but this is an amazing book which offers in my opinion rich possibilities and real Christian hope for the future.

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