Mimesis, Complexity and Vanity of Our Conflicts.
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Transcript of Mimesis, Complexity and Vanity of Our Conflicts.
Mimesis, Complexity and Vanity of Our Conflicts A dramatic model for the inter-religious hermeneutics
Ilkwaen Chung
Post-doctoral research fellow at the University of Innsbruck, Austria, 2009-10
This is the revised version of the paper presented to the The European Society for Intercultural Theology and Interreligious Studies Second Conference Salzburg, April 15-17, 2009 Interreligious Hermeneutics in pluralistic Europe (see www.sbg.ac.at/tkr/events/.../ESITIS-2009-Salzburg-program.pdf
).
Introduction The emerging multi-religious societies are characterized by a new complexity of inter-
religious encounter with all its constructive and destructive potentials. For the understanding of
the cultural complexities in the pluralistic societies and in the encounter of different religions,
the anthropologically-based more complex hermeneutic for the inter-religious dialog is
demanding. Inspired by the mimetic theory of R. Girard as the comprehensive cultural theory,
this article proposes the dramatic hermeneutics for the intercultural communication and for the
sustainable and long-term conflict-resolution and peace-making.
The social space along ethno-cultural lines in polyethnic, multi-cultural and multi-
religious societies over the last century are characterized by a new intensity and complexity of
inter-religious and intercultural encounter “with all its constructive and destructive potentials”
(Schwöbel 1990: 42) and presents enormous challenges to their members – both regarding the
possible conflicts and the possible enrichment they offer (ibid., 30). In this postmodern age
of liquid identities, indifferentiating experiences and dissolving borders, entire societies undergo
the experience of risky vulnerability and fragility. Tolerance, respect, and freedom are
fundamental social values for the peaceful coexistence, but they are continuously threatened and
vulnerable.1 Human society turns out to be a fragile entity.2 We live in a world in which reality
is experienced in a more fluid, hybrid and indifferentiating
way. Crises, risks and uncertainties
increase, but so do creative opportunities for intercultural dialogue, learning and communication.
1. A complex and dramatic model for the inter-religious hermeneutics
New challenges demand new approaches. As Schwöbel has rightly observed, a book like
The Myth of Christian Uniqueness emphasizes correctly the sense of urgency for the new
theological tasks, but it sometimes also reflects the tendency of reducing the complexity of these
tasks too quickly to programmatic proposals which restrict rather than open up creative
possibilities of theological reflection and inter-religious encounter (Schwöbel 1990: 30-1). In his
view, a Christian theology of religions and the hermeneutics for inter-religious dialogue based
on the “disconcerting” particularity of the self-disclosure of the Trinitarian God seems to be
better able to preserve the independence and distinctive particularity of the partners in dialogue
(ibid., 31, 43-4).
According to him, difficulties can be traced to the failure to come to terms with the
complex relationship of particularity and universality in the religions, and especially in
Christianity. The exclusivist view can give strong expression to the particularity and
distinctiveness of Christian faith while neglecting the universality of the activity of the God.
The pluralist approach, contrary to its avowed intentions, seems to tend to build up a picture of
the universal noumenal focus of all religions transcending and neglecting the particular concrete
religions, which allows their distinctive particularity only a penultimate and preliminary status.
This does mean that all other religions lose their distinctive particularity and become examples
of a general abstract notion of religion or instantiations of a general religious metaphysics (ibd.,
33).
Pannenberg also emphasized the necessity of the more elaborate awareness of the inter-
religious intricacy. A theology of the world religions that wants to be true to the “empirical
situation” in the way the religious traditions confront each other “must not evade or play down
1 See Colloquium on Violence and Religion (COV&R) Conference 2007 at Amsterdam Free University/Netherlands, July 4 – 8. "Vulnerability and Tolerance" (http://www.bezinningscentrum.nl/links/special_links3/covr2007.shtml); Winkler 2007: 61. 2 See Schwager 2003: 1-5.
the conflict of truth claims”. There was, according to him, always “competition” and “struggle
for superiority” on the basis of different truth claims. John Hick has been criticized for playing
down the fact that different religions make conflicting truth claims (Pannenberg 1990: 101-2).
Questioning the “ideology of ‘pluralism’” as the only possible and reasonable basis for dialogue
and suggesting dialog as only one possibility in the encounter of religions (Moltmann 1990:
149-53), Moltmann rightly points out the necessity of the “plurality of modes of dialogue” and
many pluralistic ways of inter-religious relations (D´Costa 1990: xix). In his view, the inter-
religious dialog between the religious traditions with truncated forms of religious pluralist
identity, which were “sanitized” by “subjectivist ‘tolerance’” for the religious marketplace of
Western society, would be not the beginning but the end of all true dialogue (Moltmann 1990:
152).
Therefore the more “complex and dramatic hermeneutic” for the inter-religious dialog
(
Schwager/ Niewiadomski 2003: 28) is required for the realistic understanding of the pluralistic
complexities in the encounter of different religions. The complex hermeneutics of cultural
studies based on the more Hobbsian anthropological realism can be viewed as an alternative to
the Hick’s soteriological pluralism inspired by the Kantian epistemology. René Girard, one of
the most important cultural theorists of the twentieth century, provides extraordinarily
innovative and wide-ranging insights, cutting across central concerns in philosophy,
psychoanalysis, literary studies, cultural studies, religious studies, social-cultural anthropology,
theology and sociology. Inspired by the insights of Girard, a dramatic approach for the peace-
and conflict-studies and for the intercultural hermeneutics was developed.3
The dramatic perception of the interreligious und intercultural dynamics is gradually
being appreciated as a new productive approach for the intercultural and inter-religious
hermeneutics.
4
3 Niewiadomski/Schwager/Larcher 1996. Inspired by the mimetic theory of R. Girard, the interdisciplinary and internationally networked Research Platform “World Order – Religion – Violence” in Innsbruck seeks to improve the understanding of the causes of violent conflict, the possibilities for a just world order and the conditions for peaceful coexistence. See http://www.uibk.ac.at/plattform-wrg/index.html.de
For example, under the influence of Girard, a reconciliation group in the middle
of the conflict in Northern Ireland has developed a view of the dynamics of the intercultural
conflict, conflict reason and conflict resolution. The deeply ‘mimetic nature’ of the conflicts in
Ireland is clear. Each group imitates the other in frightening way. As the similarities increase,
the rivalries proliferate (See Morrow 1995: 156). As Moltmann (1990:150) has pointed out,
4 ‘Nicht zuletzt deswegen gewinnen Vorschläge zu einem dramatischen Verständnis interreligiöser Kommunikation zunehmend an Akzeptanz’ (Wörner 2003: 24). Concerning the dramatic model inspired by Girard, see footnote 9.
religious wars within a community have always been carried out with special severity and
brutality in Christianity as well as in Islam. The anthropological theory of Girard possesses the
great analytical power for the analysis of these strange mimetic phenomena.5
The intriguing results generated by the use of Girard´s interpretative scheme when
applied to the analysis of intercultural relations pose interesting challenges to social theorists
and liberals. The rise of modern egalitarianism as a modern democratic dogma has caused the
omnipresence of intercultural mimesis and led to the “double-bound mushrooming of envy,
resentment, and violence between cultural groups” (Laurent/Paquet 1991: 176) and to the envy
society. The accompanying rise of
This mimetic
antagonism can be well explained in the light of the mythological and anthropological theme of
enemy twins or fraternal enemies who illustrate the conflict between those who become
undifferentiated (Girard 1986: 31).
indifferentiating
The more elaborate analysis of this complicated anthropological mechanism at the
intercultural and inter-religious dimension would be a suitable alternative to the more Kantian
religious pluralism and to the textual hermeneutics. As Surin (1990: 206-7) notes, the
proponents of religious pluralism seem to be “in a sense totally on the side of the angels.” The
“complexities of centuries of dialogue, conflict and inter-religious rivalry ” (Barnes 2002:9)
should not be overlooked too easily. It is not easy to deny that there is an element of (mimetic)
rivalry in the inter-religious dialog.
egalitarianism has tended to produce an
intense degree of tension, passion and envy at the intercultural interface. Girard s Fundamental
Anthropology offers one of the most groundbreaking analyses of the dynamics of quasi-osmotic
mimesis, envy and resentment in modern times with its new intensity and complexity of cultural
interpenetration and mixing. This anthropological ‘mechanism operates not only at the inter-
individual level, but also at the intercultural level’: the greater the intercultural differences in
wealth and power, in the face of decreed rights to equality, the greater the envy and the
resentment as Tocqueville explained (ibid).
6
5 Conflicts can be read in the light of the mimetic theory: ‘…welche häufig dem Brudermord als ihrem Grundmodell analog sind (wie etwa im heutigen Nordirland)….oder wurzelhaft verwandter Religionen (wie im so genannten Nahen Osten), wo es ebenfalls nicht allein um Grund und Boden geht ’ (Wörner 2003: 20).
Surin (1990: 206) has rightly pointed out the “simplicities
of religious pluralisms” that are not adequate to the task of characterizing the complex
modalities and patterns of speech typically involved in conversations between persons who
belong to different religious traditions. The theory of language allows theologian of religions to
6 Waldenfels 1990: 26. See 7. Dialog und Konkurrenz (p. 26); 4. Begegnung und Konkurrenz der Religionen (pp. 71-74); b. Konkurrenz im Bemühen um wechselseitige Inklusivität (pp. 73-4).
acknowledge that such complex notions as Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, and modernity are
imbricated in radically different epistemes, and are therefore registered in very diverse and even
incommensurable ways in the apperceptive backgrounds of those who engage in inter-religious
dialogue. It needs to be noted that the anthropological space of inter-religious dialogue is
complex, vast and dynamic (ibd).
The discursive space of J. Hick and other pluralists turns out to be the space typical of an
educated liberal Westerner (ibd., 209). In comparison with the “Western world, the home of a
decaying yet persistent Christian church”, there is, as Moltmann has rightly pointed out, in Asia
and Africa emerging a body of Christian believers who make no Constantinian claims and who
regard no such absolutism as a necessary consequence of Christian doctrines. The missionary
witness of such non-Western Christians in the midst of pluralist situations is, Moltmann (1990:
151) says, a nonviolent mission of convincing people about their faith. The emergence of non-
Western Christianity needs to be taken into consideration in understanding the new complexity
of inter-religious studies.
The critical and careful re-examination of the fundamental anthropological dynamics in
the intercultural and inter-religious communication seems to provide a critical alternative to the
theologizing of soteriological pluralists. The mainly theologizing hermeneutics needs to be
deepened and widened by the cultural studies of new intercultural complexities. Different from
the theological hermeneutics of religious experience based on the Kantian epistemological
framework and categories, anthropological hermeneutics inspired by the keen insights of Girard
does not fail to notice the human all too human passions in the inter-religious dialog and
intercultural communication.
2. Mimetic theory of René Girard as a theory of conflict
Analyzing the episode in Don Quixote in which the barber´s basin (an object of mimetic
rivalry) is transformed into Mambrino´s helmet, Girard (1978: 16) has pointed out “the vanity of
our conflicts”. The mimetic theory as a theory of conflict7
7 Palaver 2003. See 3.1. Die mimetische Theorie als Konflikttheorie.
contribute to lessons about conflict
resolution drawn from anthropology, political science, history, psychotherapy or other
disciplines. By offering fundamental anthropological insight into the complex dynamics of
conflict, rivalry and violence, a girardian perspective on non-violent conflict resolution seeks to
promote healing, peace-making and reconciliation without scapegoating in theory and practice.8
An intercultural and inter-religious hermeneutic inspired by mimetic theory might be
described as an anthropological criticism. This anthropologically hermeneutics takes the
affective and the pathological moment of religious consciousness seriously.
Girard's anthropological analysis of mimetic desire, metaphysical desire, acquisitive mimesis
and mimetic rivalry as a new way of looking at the deep-seated and human all too human causes
of human conflict and violence is both revealing and disturbing, but its implications are
enormous and groundbreaking.
9 Instead of an
abstract and over-textual analysis of religions, the anthropological deepening of hermeneutics is
necessary in order to tackle the complexities of cultural pluralism. According to Girard, it is not
differences that drive conflict but the quasi-osmotic operating mimetic desire to possess what
the other possesses. As Girard has pointed out, what is occurring today is, a mimetic rivalry on a
planetary scale.10
Anthropological turn of inter-religious hermeneutics heightened by the socio-cultural
anthropological penetration paves new ways of sustainable conflict resolution and peace studies
at levels from the interpersonal to the global. For example, social anthropologist, Stanley
Tambiah is appreciated for his penetrating social-anthropological analysis of the contemporary
central problems of ethnic violence manifested in South East Asia as well as for his original
studies on the dynamics of Buddhist society (Tambiah 1996). With the help of the theory of R.
Girard, he has deepened his socio-anthropological analysis of ethnic violence and conflict that
had broken out between the Tamils and the Sinhalese in Sri Lanka:
And this situation may also engender a process that René Girard has elaborated on in
Violence and the Sacred: the internal divisiveness and conflicts within a group or collectivity
may drive its members to seek out a scapegoat and ‘sacrificially’ kill it to gain its own uncertain
unity, making of this cleansing a sacred act of generative unanimity and duty (ibid., 277).
8 For example, see Willard M. Swartley, ed, Violence Renounced: René Girard, Biblical Studies, and Peacemaking, Studies in Peace and Scripture 4 (Telford, PA: Pandora Press, 2000). 9 Influenced by the mimetic theory, Gerd Neuhaus (1999: 69) has emphasized the necessity of the “critical theory of religious consciousness”. See footnote 69. Concerning the affective and patholical, he writes: “Freilich ist das sogenannte ‘religiöse Bewusstsein’ nie nur religiöse bestimmt, sondern es ist stets in der gleichen Weise ‘pathologisch affiziert’, in der Kant auch den Akt des ‘ich denke’ affektiven Determinanten ausgesetzt sah” (p. 72). 10 "What Is Occurring Today Is a Mimetic Rivalry on a Planetary Scale." An Interview by Henri Tincq, LE MONDE, November 6, 2001. Translated for COV&R by Jim Williams. See http://www.uibk.ac.at/theol/cover/girard_le_monde_interview.html.
In his book Buddhism Betrayed? Religion, Politics and Violence in Sri Lanka (1992),
Tambiah tried to explain how adherents of a religion that espoused nonviolence could take part
in a political movement marked by violent action. He has written about the anthropology of
ethno-nationalism and the use of collective violence as a way of conducting politics. His social-
cultural anthropological reading of the human– all too human phenomena in ethnic conflict in
Sri Lanka can be regarded as an example of new approach to the intercultural hermeneutics and
peace studies.
3. Intercultural mimesis, orientalism and postcolonial cultural studies
Hybridity, vulnerability, ambivalence and mimicry in post-colonial studies are new
concepts asking for the complex hermeneutics in the pluralistic world. Post-colonial studies,
hybrid identity construction, ethnology and cultural studies become a new theory-setting for the
intercultural hermeneutics (Winkler 2007: 62). There are comparisons to be drawn between the
girardian appropriation mimesis and a theorist of post-colonialism, Homi Bhabha’s notion of
mimicry.11
According to Richard King, Orientalism can never be unilinear projection of the Western
imagination and projections onto a colonized and passive Orient, since it always involves a
degree of intercultural mimesis. He has rightly emphasized the necessity of more complex
hermeneutics for the comprehension of the “polyphonic trajectories” that result from this
“interactive process” manifest the diverse ways in which Orientalist discourses develop (King
1999: 155-6). The religious pluralism seems to overlook the lacunae in this dynamic process of
intercultural mimesis, namely the “failure of the West to recognize its own reflections in the
mirror being held out to it” (ibid., 156).
Mimesis is central to those who explore the contact zone between differences,
hybridity, everyday realities of cultural mixing and the ongoing process of intercultural
borrowing at the borders between different cultures. In order to comprehend the intercultural
complexities in this pluralistic globalized world, it would be helpful to draw attention to what
Charles Hallisey has called intercultural mimesis – a phrase denoting the cultural interchange
that occurs between the native and the Orientalist in the construction of Western knowledge
about the Orient.
11 Patrick Imbert, ‘The Girardian Appropriation Mimesis, the Platonic Mimesis and Bhabha’s Mimicry: The passion for controlling representation’ in http://www.uibk.ac.at/theol/cover/events/innsbruck2003_Imbert_Paper.doc).
Based on a variety of and post-colonial and post-structuralist thinkers, such as Foucault,
Gadamer, Said, and Spivak, King rightly shows how religion needs to be re-described along the
lines of cultural studies. Philip Almond´s pioneering study of the invention of Buddhism in the
nineteenth century12
The problematic of Orientalism and post-colonial cultural studies is increasingly
discussed in the intercultural and inter-religious hermeneutics.
also provides a model for future endeavors not only in the field of “political
hermeneutics or semiotics of the myths of power, and knowledge” (Surin 1990: 206), but also in
the field of new discourse on intercultural mimesis and Orientalism. Another book Curators of
the Buddha. The Study of Buddhism under Colonialism is an important work to draw buddhist
studies into the larger arena of post-colonial cultural studies and to trace the genealogies and the
logics of representation of orientalist buddhology.
13 As John Milbank rightly
observes, the other religions were taken to be species of the genus religion by Christian thinkers
who systematically subsumed alien cultural phenomena under categories which comprise
western notions of what constitutes religious thought and practice. These false categorizations
connected with the usual construal of religion as a genus embodying “covert Christianizations”
have often been (mimetically) accepted by Western-educated representatives of the other
religions themselves, who are (because of the intercultural mimesis) ‘unable to resist the
politically imbued rhetorical force of Western discourse’. 14
For the dynamic understanding of “the Dialectical Image: A Cross-Cultural Play of
Mimesis and Misrepresentation” (Urban 2003:14), the more complex and dramatic
hermeneutics for the critique of the politics of representations as a whole in this mimetic process
are required. In a discussion of modern constructions of Zen Buddhism, Robert Sharf (1993: 39)
has written about an “irony” in the intercultural dialog: The irony is, according to him, that the
Zen that so captured the imagination of the West was in fact a product of the New Buddhism of
the Meiji. Moreover, those aspects of Zen most attractive to the Occident – the emphasis on
12 Philip Almond, The British Discovery of Buddhism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006). 13 For example, ESITIS (European Society for Intercultural Theology and Interreligious Studies) Conference Salzburg 2009, 15th - 18th April 2009 “Interreligious Hermeneutics in pluralistic Europe”, 6th Section: Is interreligious hermeneutics possible in the light of postcolonial deconstruction of religion? (http://www.sbg.ac.at/tkr/events/ESITIS-2009/ESITIS-2009-Salzburg-program.pdf). 14 Milbank 1990: 176. Supported by Nirad C. Chaudhuri and not falsely, Milbank take a few examples: John Hick can speak of ‘many roads to salvation,’ yet Eastern religions do not seek deliverance by divine grace from a sinful or merely natural condition. The Hindu practice of bhakti is frequently represented as an instance of worship, when in fact it is mainly concerned with a systematic appeasement of, and seeking of favors from, the various deities. The Eastern religions are often seen as highly mystical and spiritual in character, yet the practices, as Milbank rightly points out, misallocated to these exclusively Christian categories are not concerned with a quest for beatitude or unity with the godhead, but with attainment of worldly power and liberation of/from the self (ibid., 176).
spiritual experience – were derived in large part from Occidental sources. “Like Narcissus,
Western enthusiasts failed to recognize their own reflection in the mirror being held out to
them”, remarks Sharf (ibid). This ironical phenomenon might be well understood in light of the
mimetic theory, particularly in the sense of intercultural mimesis. Calling attention to the issue
of “radical decontextualization of the Zen tradition”, Sharf argued correctly that Asian
apologists, convinced that Zen was making significant inroads in the West, failed to recognize
the degree to which Zen was “therapeutized” by European and American enthusiasts and
Western enthusiasts systematically failed to recognize the nationalist ideology underlying
modern Japanese constructions of Zen (ibid).
As Bernard Faure (1993: 5) rightly observed, the Western understanding of Zen is
informed by the entire orientalist tradition that gave rise to the various disciplines that define the
space of Zen studies in Western culture – and in particular by the circumstances of the Western
reception of Buddhism. For this reason, the general questions raised by Said in his work,
Orientalism, are especially relevant for the field of Zen studies. Western perception of Zen is
necessarily mediated by Orientalist categories, which at work even in the nativist discourse of a
Japanese scholar like D. T. Suzuki (ibid., 267). In the light of the dramatic understanding of the
latent operation of (quasi-osmotic) mimesis at the intercultural level, the inverted Zen
Orientalism can be properly comprehended: “Zen Orientalism” represents, according to Faure,
reverse, or inverted Orientalism or “secondary Orientalism” which constitutes a subspecies of
Japanese nativism predicated on an inversion of Orientalist schemas (ibid., 5-9). Zen mysticism
and Zen Orientalism appears as an ideological instrument to promote a cultural image of Japan
in the West und as an essential component of the so-called cultural exceptionalism
(Nihonjinron) (ibid, 86). Some Western scholars romanticized Zen mysticism, which was
subsequently re-exported to Japan (Arisaka 1996:6) and was mimetically appropriated.
In comparison to the tendency to isolate Asian religions into compartments of
Orientalism or spiritualism or mysticism, an increasingly self-conscious post-orientalist
Buddhist studies begins to understand Buddhism in the light of postcolonial cultural studies,
cultural and social anthropology, literary criticism and art history. In Germany this “shift of
Asian studies to cultural and social science studies” is also taking place (Kollmar-Paulenz/ Prohl
2003: 146). The “auto-orientalism” of East copying, internalizing and appropriating the western
Orientalism is critically examined (Kleine 2003: 241). This new approach of post-orientalist
Buddhist studies with its sensitivity for the dynamic complexities in the intercultural mixing and
borrowing would be recommendable for the pluralistic theology of religions, for comparative
religionists, and for those interested in interfaith dialogues, who all too often uncritically accept
Zen Orientalism.
The book Rude Awakenings. Zen, the Kyoto School, & the Question of Nationalism
suggests the necessity of the more complex and dramatic understanding of the intercultural
communication as follows:
Absent the entire problematic of the war years, the phrase “Kyoto school” soon became
synonymous with a wide-eyed, open-minded approach to religious philosophy that seemed to
answer the need for a serious encounter between East and West as few contemporary systems of
thought have… For by and large, the comparative philosophers and theologians who were
giving these Japanese thinkers their warm welcome had simply overlooked the political
implications of their thoughts, especially during World War II. Today, the situation has clearly
changed.15
The Protestant Buddhism as a new kind of Buddhism also could be well explained from
the standpoint of the more complex and dramatic hermeneutics inspired by the mimetic theory
of Girard, particularly in terms of the intercultural mimesis. Protestant Buddhism in Theravāda
Buddhism both originated as a protest (against Christianity) and itself “reflects” (mimetically)
Protestantism.
16
Sharf also analyzed the element of intercultural mimesis in the process of
refashioning of Buddhism in the image of Christianity: According to him, the Theravāda
reforms, like the Buddhist reforms in Japan, must be considered in the context of the major
ideological changes precipitated by the forces of urbanization, modernization, and the spread of
Western style education, all of which contributed to the rise of Protestant Buddhism (Sharf
1995: 251). Like Meiji New Buddhism in Japan, Theravāda Buddhism “was refashioned in the
image of post-Enlightenment Christianity” by emphasizing the values of individualism, which
included the affirmation of worldly achievement coupled with this-worldly asceticism and by
repudiating the supernatural or magical or ritual aspect of Buddhism (ibid., 252).
15 Editor´s Introduction, in James W. Heisig and John C. Maraldo., ed, Rude Awakenings. Zen, the Kyoto School, & the Question of Nationalism (Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, 1995), p. vii ; See also Arisaka 1996: 6. 16 Gombrich 1988: 174. See Chapter Seven. Protestant Buddhism (pp. 172-197).
Conclusion
The challenge of the intricacies of pluralistic complexity seems to demand the more
dramatic hermeneutics of the anthropological17
This anthropologically-based complex hermeneutics for the intercultural communication
asks for a realistic understanding of the pluralistic complexities, but it can also promise the
sustainable and long-term conflict-resolution and peace-making and at last reveals the vanity of
our mimetic conflicts.
rather than the purely textual hermeneutics.
Besides the civic virtues of pluralism and tolerance towards Others, the anthropological re-
reading of the human, all too human dimension of mimetic affections, passions, resentment and
envy in highly complex and pluralistic societies and also at the intercultural dimension is
required. The anthropological hermeneutics in an era of pluralism, complexity, and globalization
is increasingly accepted and applied in many cultural studies and religious studies. For example,
Slavoj Žižek (2008:72-9, 73) describes the Terrorist Resentment: “The problem is not cultural
difference (their effort to preserve their identity), but the opposite fact that the fundamentalists
are already like us, that, secretly, they have already internalized our standards and measure
themselves by them”. It is not easy to deny that envy and resentment are a constitutive
component of human (mimetic) desire (also at the intercultural level).
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