Welcome to Theoretical Studies in Literature and Art,

Theoretical Studies in Literature and Art ›› 2017, Vol. 37 ›› Issue (4): 143-150.

• Western Literary Theory and Criticism • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Mimetic Violence and the Issue of the Other: A New Interpretation of René Girard

Li Xue, Bi Xiao   

  1. comparative literature and world literature at Fudan University (Shanghai 200433, China); Si-Mian Institute for Advanced Studies in Humanities of East China Normal University
  • Online:2017-09-25 Published:2017-11-26
  • About author:Li Xue is a Ph.D. student of comparative literature and world literature at Fudan University (Shanghai 200433, China), with research interest in Russian literature and art history, as well as western literary theory. Bi Xiao is a Ph.D. student of Si-Mian Institute for Advanced Studies in Humanities of East China Normal University, with research interest in the interdisciplinary study of foreign literature and intellectual history.

Abstract: In his study of some literary canons, René Girard, a French literary critic and anthropologist, analyzes human desire and sums up the theory of mimetic desire, which means that a person's desire, as the desire of the subject, always imitates the similar desire that belongs to the mediator of the desire. Girard distinguishes the modes of mimetic desire into two types, the external mediation and the internal mediation, and draws a conclusion that the internal mediation would inevitably lead to violence due to the competition between the subject and the mediator. Referring to Roland Barthes's mythologies, this article indicates that the modern myth generated by the external mediation can similarly cause violence. Girard's theory concerns the classic issue of the other, so that the last part of this article reveals the hidden dialogic relationship between Girard and Bakhtin. On the one hand, Bakhtin's effort on the relationship of "the self and the other" points out the importance of dialogue and empathy, which can deal with the violence produced by the internal mediation. On the other hand, the violence of the external mediation can be eliminated in a way by using Isaiah Berlin's pluralism under the Bakhtinian view.

Key words: mimetic desire, violence, the other, Bakhtin