Margins
Geometrías del deseo book cover
Geometrías del deseo
2011
First Published
3.44
Average Rating
124
Number of Pages

Geometrías del deseo es el libro más reciente de René Girard, uno de los pensadores actuales más innovadores. La piedra angular de su teoría, el deseo mimético –el que es orientado siempre por aquello que desean los otros–, permanece firme como elemento de comprensión para el indescifrable caos moderno. En un mundo secular en el que los sujetos a adorar que han reemplazado a los dioses se encuentran entre los propios hombres, la obra de Girard cobra especial importancia para entender las relaciones sociales y amorosas. En esta compilación de ensayos esenciales de René Girard –realizada con gran tino por Mark Aspach– el filósofo retoma algunos de los grandes autores clásicos como Dante, Shakespeare y Racine, e importantes autores contemporáneos como Malraux, Sartre y otros más, para descifrar a sus personajes y tragedias. Con su habitual agudeza, muestra que la literatura es un espejo de los fondos más ocultos de la existencia humana, al ser un arte que ofrece claves para comprender la principal fuerza motriz del actuar humano: el deseo y su desquiciante complejidad.

Avg Rating
3.44
Number of Ratings
18
5 STARS
17%
4 STARS
28%
3 STARS
39%
2 STARS
17%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

Rene Girard
Rene Girard
Author · 26 books

René Girard was a French-born American historian, literary critic, and philosopher of social science whose work belongs to the tradition of anthropological philosophy. He was born in the southern French city of Avignon on Christmas day in 1923. Between 1943 and 1947, he studied in Paris at the École des Chartres, an institution for the training of archivists and historians, where he specialized in medieval history. In 1947 he went to Indiana University on a year’s fellowship and eventually made almost his entire career in the United States. He completed a PhD in history at Indiana University in 1950 but also began to teach literature, the field in which he would first make his reputation. He taught at Duke University and at Bryn Mawr before becoming a professor at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore. In 1971 he went to the State University of New York at Buffalo for five years, returned to Johns Hopkins, and then finished his academic career at Stanford University where he taught between 1981 and his retirement in 1995. Girard is the author of nearly thirty books, with his writings spanning many academic domains. Although the reception of his work is different in each of these areas, there is a growing body of secondary literature on his work and his influence on disciplines such as literary criticism, critical theory, anthropology, theology, psychology, mythology, sociology, economics, cultural studies, and philosophy.Girard’s fundamental ideas, which he has developed throughout his career and provide the foundation for his thinking, are that desire is mimetic (all of our desires are borrowed from other people), that all conflict originates in mimetic desire (mimetic rivalry), that the scapegoat mechanism is the origin of sacrifice and the foundation of human culture, and religion was necessary in human evolution to control the violence that can come from mimetic rivalry, and that the Bible reveals these ideas and denounces the scapegoat mechanism. In 1990, friends and colleagues of Girard’s established the Colloquium on Violence and Religion to further research and discussion about the themes of Girard’s work. The Colloquium meets annually either in Europe or the United States. René Girard died on November 4, 2015, at the age of 91 in Stanford.

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