Contents
Introduction
Part 1. Mimetic Theory and Religion
Neither Dawkins nor Durkheim: On René Girard’s Theory of Religion, by Jean-Pierre Dupuy
Sacrifice in Hegel and Girard, by Anselm Tilman Ramelow
Reason and Revelation: An Important Distinction?, by John Ranieri
The Messianic Moment: Bergson and Girard, by Benoît Chantre
Girard and Religion in the Age of Secularism, by Otto Kallscheuer
Why Rousseau Cannot Laugh: Structuring Motif—“Achever,” by Jeremiah Alberg
Girard and the Feminist Critique of Religion: Intimate Mediation in Kristeva and Girard, by Martha Reineke
Part 2. Mimetic Theory, Christianity, and Interfaith (Interreligious) Dialogue
Girard and World Religions: The State of the Question, by Robert J. Daly
René Girard and World Religions, by Michael Kirwan
The Ambivalence of Interreligious Historiography: Foreign and Domestic Narratives, by Richard Schenk
Sacrifice as a Contested Concept between R. Schwager and R. Girard and Its Significance for Interreligious Dialogue, by Nikolaus Wandinger
The Abrahamic Revolution, by Wolfgang Palaver
The “Hellenic” Rationality of Interreligious Dialogue: René Girard, Simone Weil, and Pope Benedict XVI, by Ann Astell
Part 3. Rivalry, Sacrifice, and World Religions
Burning Desires, Burning Corpses: Girardian Reflections on Fire in Hinduism and Buddhism, by Brian Collins
Girard and Hindu Sacrifice, by Noel Sheth
The Roots of Violence: Society and the Individual in Buddhism and Girard, by Jacob Dalton and Alexander von Rospatt
Religious Sacrifice, Social Scapegoating, and Self-Justification, by Ted Peters
Judaism and the Exodus from Archaic Religion: Reading René Girard among the World Religions, by Sandor Goodhart
Tawhid: The Oneness of God and the Desire for the Good, by Adam Ericksen
Islam: Law and Violence (and Nonviolence), by Rüdiger Lohlker
Girard and the Analogy of Desire, by James Alison
Contributors
Index