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Burkert, Girard, and Smith hold important and contradictory
theories about the nature and origin of ritual sacrifice, and the
role violence plays in religion and culture. These papers and
conversations derive from a conference that pursued the possibility
and utility of a general theory of religion and culture, especially
one based on violence. The special value of this volume is the
conversations as such--the real record of working scholars engaged
with one another's theories, as they make and meet challenges, and
move and maneuver.
Girard and Burkert present different versions of the same
conviction: that a single theory can account for ritual and its
social function, a theory that posits original acts of group
violence. Smith sharply questions both the possibility and the
utility of such a general theory. Among the highlights of this
stimulating interchange of ideas is a searching criticism of
Girard's theory of generative scapegoating, which he answers with
clarity and conviction, and a challenging of Burkert's theory of
the origin of sacrifice in the hunt by Smith's argument, posed as a
"jeu d'esprit, " that sacrifice originates with the domestication
of animals.
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