RENE GIRARD: Violence and the Sacred (1988)
1. Sacrifice
In many rituals the sacrificial act assumes two opposing aspects: sacred and criminal.
Because the victim is sacred, it is criminal to kill him – but the victim is sacred only because he is to be killed.
If sacrifice resembles criminal violence, we may say that there is hardly any form of violence that cannot be described in terms of sacrifice.
Sacrifice contains an element of Mystery.
We must explore the relationship between sacrifice and violence.
Physiology of violence varies little from one individual to another, even from culture to another.
Once aroused, the urge to violence triggers physical changes that prepare men’s bodies for battle. It is more difficult to quell an impulse toward violence than to rouse it.
When unappeased, violence seeks and finds a surrogate victim. This tendency is not limited to human violence. Animals that are usually chosen as victims for sacrificial rituals are those who present the most human characteristics.
Nuers and Dinka civilisations maintain a bovine society that parallels their own.
Hypothesis of substitution as the basis for the practice of sacrifice.
Fairy tales of childhood where wolf, ogre or dragon eats up a large stone in place of a child as a sacrificial cast.
Stories of Cain and Abel. Farmer vs shepherd. The murderer is the one who does not have a violence-outlet.
Isaac, Esau and Jacob. Odyssey.
In each case an animal intervenes to prevent violence from attaining the designated victim.
Paul Valéry: Poetry as a purely solipsistic activity practiced solely out of love for the art.
The sacrificial process requires a certain degree of misunderstanding.
The victim is a substitute for all the members of the community, offered up by themselves.
The sacrifice serves to protect the entire community from its own violence.
The purpose of the sacrifice is to restore harmony to the community. To reinforce the social fabric.
Such practices ‘pacify the country and make people settles… It is through the sacrifice that the unity of the people is strengthened’ (Ch’U Yu II, 2).
A ritual framework is needed for a sacrifice to be such. Otherwise it become a crime and the sacrifier a madman or a criminal. Example of Ajax.
Medea. Human sacrifice rather than animal sacrifice. Her children substitute the object of her hatred (the father) which is out of reach.
Medea prepares for the death of her children like a priest preparing for a sacrifice.
There is no essential difference between animal and human sacrifice.
All reduction into categories, whether implicit or explicit, must be avoided; all victims, animal or human, must be treated in the same fashion if we wish to apprehend the criteria by which victims are selected and discover a universal principle for their action.
All reduction into categories, whether implicit or explicit, must be avoided; all victims, animal or human, must be treated in the same fashion if we wish to apprehend the criteria by which victims are selected and discover a universal principle for their action.
The wide spectrum of human victims sacrificed is heterogeneous.
Unifying factors are: exterior or marginal individuals. Either outside or on the fringes of society.
Women are never, or rarely, selected as sacrificial victims out of fear of vengeance by her parents’ clan, with whom the married woman usually retains her ties.
Vengeance.
The sacrifice is primarily an act of violence without risk of vengeance. Between the victims and the community, a crucial social link is missing, so thy can be exposed to violence without fear of reprisal.
The desire to commit an act of violence on those near us cannot be suppressed without a conflict; we must divert that impulse, therefore, towards the sacrificial victim, the creature we can strike down without fear of reprisal.
Men can dispose of their violence more efficiently if they regard the process not as something emanating from within themselves, but as a necessity imposed from without, a divine decree whose least infraction call down terrible punishment.
Vengeance is an interminable, infinitely repetitive process.
It is precisely because they detest violence that men make a duty for vengeance.
Our judicial system does not suppress vengeance. It limits it to a single act of reprisal, enacted by a sovereign authority.
Public vengeance vs private vengeance. Public vengeance is the exclusive property of well-policed societies. The judicial system.
According to Robert Lowie there are two types of societies. One with and one without a central authority.
If primitive societies don’t have remedies for dealing with outbreaks of violence, preventive measures play an essential role. Sacrifice as an instrument of prevention in the struggle against violence.
The sacrificial process furnishes an outlet for those violent impulses, that cannot be mastered by self-restraint. The sacrificial process prevents the spread of violence by keeping vengeance in check.
The more critical the situation the more ‘precious’ the sacrificial victim must be.
Ritual and sacrificial rites assume essential roles in societies that lack a firm judicial system.
Violence and the sacred are inseparable.
Religion strives to subdue violence. It postulates a mixture of violence and nonviolence.
The same can be said of our judicial system.
Enumeration of curative procedures as steps in the direction of a legal system.
Religion shelters us from violence just as violence seeks shelter in religion.
There are as many legitimate forms of violence as there are men to implement them.
Vengeance, sacrifice and legal punishment are fundamentally the same and tend to adopt the same types of violent response in times of crisis.
Expiatory procedure of the Chuckchi people who avert a feud by killing an (innocent) member of the family. By killing, not the murderer, but someone close to him, an act of reciprocity is avoided and the necessity for revenge bypassed.
Only violence can put an end to violence, and that is why violence is self-propagating.
Analogous to avoidance of physical contact with the anathema in Greek culture.
To do violence to a violent person is to be contaminated by his violence. It is best to arrange matters so that nobody is directly responsible to his death.
Abandoned without provision in mid ocean.
Stranded on top of mountain.
Forced to hurl himself from a cliff.
All attempts to achieve a radically new type of violence that will put an end once and for all to violence itself.
Attempt to halt recurrent patterns by introducing a disruptive element.
Notions of impurity and contagiousness of violence as active roles in social relations.
In many religious communities, the scene of a violent act and the related objects send out emanations that penetrate everything. Effort is made not to touch representatives of violence.
Fear of infection by the impure resemble modern precautions against bacterial infection and avoidance of pollution.