Dense but intriguing. Especially concerning the perversity of sexual and other 
desires...

René Girard
https://alastairadversaria.com/2008/07/05/rene-girard/
(via Instapaper)


A week ago I graduated from the University of St. Andrews. The graduation 
ceremony was very enjoyable, but was made far more memorable on account of the 
fact that René Girard was being presented with an honorary doctorate.

I have long been a huge fan of the work of René Girard. In contrast to many 
other thinkers, Girard is renowned, not for many insights in various areas of 
study, but for a singular idea of profound explanatory potential, a simple 
insight that illuminates innumerable otherwise perplexing questions. Girard’s 
great insight is that human desire, far from being purely individual and 
arising within us apart from external influence, is imitative and 
‘inter-dividual’ in its constitution. From this single insight great light is 
shed upon social and interpersonal dynamics, religion, mythology and culture.

Girard claims that we learn what to desire by imitating the desires of others. 
This form of behaviour is easiest to observe in the case of children. Put two 
children in a room with a hundred toys and it is quite likely that they will 
end up fighting over the same one. Rather than arising spontaneously or being 
fixed on predefined objects, each child’s desire for the object is mediated and 
reinforced by the desire of the other. Girard argues that desire is ‘mimetic’ 
in character; our desire does not directly fix itself on objects, but is 
mediated by the desire of others for certain objects. Invested with the aura of 
the other’s desire, certain objects can become suddenly greatly desirable to us.

The relationship of imitation (often mutual) between the desiring person and 
the mediator of their desire is deeply important. Objects of desire are largely 
interchangeable, but the bond between the individual and the mediator of his or 
her desire is far stronger than this. This relationship of imitation can be 
manifested in a deep attraction between the top mimetic partners, an attraction 
that can transform into antagonism with incredible ease. Both the attraction 
and the antagonism find a common source in the imitative relationship that 
exists between the two partners. In such a mimetic relationship the one who 
desires wants to be like the model of his or her desire in all things, to 
occupy their position (Girard’s account of the Oedipus complex follows this 
line).

As they both seek the same object of desire and cannot share it, it is not 
surprising that rivalry develops. Girard finds this dynamic in much great 
literature. For instance, two friends desire the same woman and become each 
other’s rival. For Girard, the most important relationship in this classic love 
triangle is the relationship between the two friends. In such a relationship 
the woman may well be interchangeable with almost any other woman. What makes 
her significant is not what she is in herself, but what she is as surrounded by 
the aura of the other’s desire. She is desirable because she is desired by the 
other. Girard observes the way in which such mimetic rivalries escalate and how 
‘scapegoats’ serve as lightning conductors for the violence that these 
rivalries breed. Warring parties can be reconciled through the scapegoat 
mechanism, as they join together in venting their violence on a third party.

The fact of imitative desire helps to explain the contagious power of certain 
evil actions. After the first stone has been thrown, each following stone 
becomes progressively easier to cast, having a model to follow. Imitation and 
the scapegoat mechanism illuminates the manner in which evil reports and false 
accusations can gain virtually unstoppable momentum; the initiation of such a 
report is like the first fall of stones down a mountainside, which starts the 
landslide. The guilt of the scapegoat is everywhere presumed and no fair 
hearing is given. As a single false report is repeated and parroted enough, it 
gains in credibility with each repetition, until the unanimity created by the 
contagion of imitation makes its truth appear undeniable.

Girard’s insight concerning mimetic desire can help us understand some of the 
mechanics of dysfunctional relationships and psychologies. For instance, the 
masochist is someone who desires the unobtainable, or always thwarts his own 
attempts to gain the object of his desire. He desires the failure of his desire 
to reach its supposed object, subconsciously aware of the fact that, if the 
desire were to achieve its object, it would merely have secured its own death. 
If the masochist were in fact to gain the object of his desire, it would cease 
to be desirable to him. The thing that makes the object desirable is the 
obstacle (whether the prohibition or the person) that obstructs the way.

Masochism is central to the psychology of sin. Sin is aroused by the Law, 
because the Law sets up a system of prohibitions, which invests the 
transgression with the aura of desirability for it. Apart from the Law sin 
lacks this degree of desirability. In the temptation of Adam and Eve in the 
Garden of Eden we see such a dynamic in operation. The fact that the fruit is 
forbidden is used by Satan to excite the desire of Adam and Eve. Satan portrays 
God as a model-obstacle to Adam and Eve: God places a taboo on the Tree of the 
Knowledge of Good and Evil because he wishes to prevent Adam and Eve from 
achieving the self-sufficiency that he enjoys. Satan thus twists the natural 
relationship of imitation that mankind should have with God into a perverted 
and masochistic one. Rather than the positive imitation of God’s desire that 
mankind should display, Satan presents God’s desire as an obstacle.

It is this sort of logic that Slavoj Žižek appeals to when he observes that, 
with the ‘death of God’, far from everything being permitted, nothing is 
permitted. The perverted desire of sin depends on God for its survival. Where 
there is no God left to prohibit, everything ceases to be desirable. Sin is 
drawn to death. It desires that which is forbidden, but it cannot satisfy that 
desire. Every forbidden fruit will turn to dust in its mouth. Sinners desire 
the death of God, but this death of God leaves them further from satisfaction 
than they were beforehand.

Mimetic desire can explain why we often chose as models of desire people who 
are indifferent to us or despise us (unsmiling models create the aura of 
desirability that goes with top brand products). Their indifference is seen to 
be indicative of a self-sufficiency that we lack. We desire to be 
self-sufficient like them and so we desire the objects that they desire.

Our sense of self-worth is not unaffected by mimetic desire. Our self-worth can 
often involve imitation of how others value us. This can produce ugly 
relationships on occasions. The girlfriend who keeps returning to the abusive 
boyfriend can be hooked on him like a drug. As he continues to mistreat her, 
her sense of self-worth plummets and becomes increasingly dependent on any 
displays of affection that he might give her. Far from undermining his role as 
a model of her self-valuation, the abuse of the boyfriend may actually serve to 
reinforce his role. A person in such an abusive situation may well reject the 
very people who most care for her (their care and love being taken as a sign of 
their insufficiency), while being irresistibly drawn to the one who despises 
and abuses her. The violence of the boyfriend reinforces her belief that beyond 
this violence lies the promised land of self-worth. However, deep down she 
knows that this is an illusory promise; if the violence were to cease, she 
would not enjoy the self-worth that she seeks. Ultimately it is the violence 
that creates the illusion; were the violence to end the illusion would 
disappear too.

Girard’s insight into the mimetic character of desire challenges us to ask 
questions about the reasons why we desire and don’t desire certain things. For 
example, do we pay a high price for items because we value them, or do we value 
items because we pay a high price for them? I know a bookseller who sends out a 
regular mailing list. If one of the books doesn’t sell after a number of 
mailings he will, counter-intuitively, raise the price of the book in question. 
The book almost invariably sells in the next mailing. Supposing the price tag 
to be an indicator of the desire of the other, we can invest certain objects 
with an aura of desirability that they might otherwise lack. Girard also helps 
us to uncover the hidden causes of our rivalries and exposes the manner in 
which we have unwittingly used others as our scapegoats.



Sent from my iPhone

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