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Happy Anniversary!

chronicle · Saturday, July 6th, 1996 · 4 min read

This  first anniversary  of these  Chronicles  is an appropriate moment for taking stock. Has this column been of cultural value? in other words, has it helped to promote the cause of  love  over  resentment ? The  GAlist  has grown from 35 to over 170, and in June the  Anthropoetics  WWW site reached a new high of over 3000 accesses, exclusive of images. This modest expansion shows that there is indeed an audience for  originary thinking  in, or in between, the  humanities  and the  social sciences . For this anniversary column, I thought it would be useful to discuss a few underlying preoccupations of originary anthropology not altogether apparent from the definition of the human as  the deferral of violence through representation . The Critique of Liberalism Some of my best friends, many subscribers to this list, and the vast majority of the  intelligentsia  are  liberals . But current debates about affirmative action, welfare, and balanced budgets reflect the  waning of liberalism ; its fundamental intuitions are becoming counter-productive. The clearest sign of this is the increasingly  sacrificial  nature of liberal rhetoric, its increasing  demonization of its opponents . Liberalism is a deliberately anti-sacrificial, anti-ritual outlook with roots in the  Enlightenment . Its fundamental  discovery procedure  is to search for the traces of the sacrificial in secular society. Any sign of disadvantage is interpreted as  prima facie  evidence of  victimization . In a liberal polity, the vocation of the political order is to make up for this victimization by the granting of material compensation. Liberal  care for victims  is not a minor accomplishment. A critique of liberalism must offer an alternative procedure for rooting out the sacrificial residues in our society. When is it appropriate to identify a class of victims? If our fundamental criterion of humanity is  participation in the social dialogue , we must applaud the presence in the political conversation of members of groups previously excluded. The “majority” can no longer speak about “minorities” as  external others ; everything said must be sayable in the presence of all. But the newly included cannot inherit  victimary rights from the previously excluded, however recent the inclusion. Dialogue is a  postritual  activity; it may have  losers , but no  victims . The external rhetoric of victimage is never appropriate from within. In the current context, the Republican–and now Clintonian–rhetoric about balancing the budget  “for the sake of our children”  signifies less a concern for budgets or children than a need to transcend the liberal rhetoric of victimary compensation, which we can only do by balancing the claims of one group of innocents with those of another. Originary thinking  allows us to understand the trade-off in programs of group preference between the positive function of admitting new voices to the dialogue and the negative one of creating quasi-permanent categories of victims. It suggests that once the new conversation has begun, victimary language must be excluded lest it legitimize racial and ethnic resentments potentially far more damaging to the social order from within than from without. Religion and Culture Is this a  historically progressive  critique of liberalism? This can be reformulated as a  religious question : Is there an alternative to the binary opposition of  traditional religion  and  liberal secularism ? Can the fundamental moral intuition that defends us from mimetic violence be founded on an  anthropological hypothesis ? Does the understanding of the link between language and the transcendental that is the heart of  GA  allow us to dispense with traditional religion, or, on the contrary, does it force us to recognize the inevitable  specificity  of historical revelations, as opposed to revelation in general? Much more reflection is required on the relationship between the semiotic and the cultural-religious spheres. It seems almost too obvious that ideas about  immortality ,  eternity , and the like are attributes of the sign that we attach to our idea of the sacred, or in other terms, that these sacred attributes are revealed to us only through their manifestation in language. This idea finds little resonance in the religious thinking of any epoch, including our own. Yet the critique of ritual sacrifice, which reaches its high point in Christianity but is clearly present in Buddhism and in all modern religions, is explicitly related to the equation of the sacred with the linguistic:  “In the beginning was the Word.”  The  Word  is what defines us as not living by bread alone; it affirms our essence as  spiritual  before it is  material . The elimination of material sacrifice (Jesus driving the merchants out of the Temple) brings the indefinite multiplication of  goods  (bread and fishes) modeled on the reproducibility of  signs  as opposed to  things : if we truly share the  Word , our material problems will pose us no difficulty. Deconstruction’s stab at this intuition was flawed by its naively victimary critique of  phallogocentrism ; in this, it followed the pattern of contemporary liberalism. Love and Resentment If  GA  would have us do without the consolations of religion, how does it help us to generate love from resentment? Does the originary understanding of the human grant us a deeper understanding of the role of  love-relationships  as oases and testing-grounds for the trials of the  universal marketplace ? The current preoccupations of the intellectual world make it less rather than more eager to reflect on the unity of  mimesis . As I wondered a few columns ago, is a generative hypothesis of the human possible? Is  GA’s  understanding of its problematic status in the dialogue of either the  humanities  or the  social sciences  a sufficient basis on which to create, as it has shown some signs of doing, its own  dialogic space ? These are questions I hope to explore with you in these  Chronicles  and on the  GAlist  during the coming year. Enjoy this column? Yes No Δ

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