Lexington Books
Pages: 424
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-0-7391-6900-1 • Hardback • January 2014 • $162.00 • (£125.00)
978-0-7391-6901-8 • eBook • January 2014 • $153.50 • (£119.00)
Vern Neufeld Redekop is a full professor in the School of Conflict Studies at Saint Paul University, Ottawa. He is the co-author of Introduction to Conflict Studies: Empirical, Theoretical, and Ethical Dimensions (2012) and Beyond Control: A Mutual Respect Approach to Protest Crowd – Police Relations (2010).
Thomas Ryba is Notre Dame Theologian-in-Residence at the Saint Thomas Aquinas Catholic Center as well as lecturer in philosophy and religious studies and adjunct professor of Jewish studies at Purdue University.
Introduction: Deep-Rooted Conflict, Reconciliation and Mimetic Theory
Vern Neufeld Redekop and Thomas Ryba
Part I. FORGIVENESS, RESPONSIBILITY, AND BLESSING
Chapter 1: Mimetic Desire, Aphetic Mimesis, and Reconciliation as the Nexus of Letting Go and Turning Around
Cameron Thomson
Chapter 2: The Self and Other People: Reading Conflict Resolution and Reconciliation with René Girard and Emmanuel Levinas
Sandor Goodhart
Chapter 3: Dialogical Response
Sandor Goodhart and Vern Neufeld Redekop
Chapter 4: Blessing-Based Reconciliation in the Face of Violence
Vern Neufeld Redekop
Part II. THEOLOGY OF FRIENDSHIP, PEACE, AND NON-VIOLENCE
Chapter 5: Towards a Theology of Friendship in the “Global Village”
Nadia Delicata
Chapter 6: Clashing Minorities, Converging Majorities: Toward a Coming Religious Peace
Jon Pahl
Chapter 7: The Creative Non-Violent Approach of Walter Wink
Sue-Anne Hess
Chapter 8: Improvising the Practice of Nonresistance as Creative Mimesis
Peter Smith
Part III. RETHINKING GIRARDIAN CONCEPTS
Chapter 9: René Girard and the Symbolism of Religious SacrificeEugene WebbChapter 10: Psychology, Hermeneutic Philosophy, and Girardian Thought: Toward a Creative MimesisFrank Richardson and Kathryn FrostChapter 11: Rethinking Girardian Reconciliation: The Myth of the Exception
Leonhard Praeg
Part IV. RECONCILIATION IN CONTEXT
Chapter 12: Seeding Reconciliation in a Theatre of War: A New Role for Military Chaplains
Steve Moore
Chapter 13: India and Pakistan: Changing Trajectory: The Role Of Karma Within a Framework Of ReconciliationRupa MenonChapter 14: There is a crack in everything…. New relationships for self and other in Northern Ireland
Duncan Morrow
Chapter 15: Reconciliation as Resistance: Martyrdom in East Timor
Joel Hodge
Chapter 16: Mimesis, Residential Schools and Reconciliation
Cynthia Stirbys
Chapter 17: Bosnian Children of Command Rape
Angela Kiraly
Chapter 18: “We Forgive and ask Forgiveness”: The Papal Prayers for Forgiveness in Mimetic Perspective—With an Afterthought on Recent Cases of Sexual Abuse of Minors by Church Officials
Nikolaus Wandinger
Chapter 19: From Fracturing Resemblances to Restorative Differences: Identity, Conflict, and Mimetic Desire among the Maya Tzotzil Chamula of Chiapas Mexico
Miguel de Las Casas Rolland
Conclusion
Vern Neufeld Redekop and Thomas Ryba
Professor Rene Girard contended that mimetic violence and rivalry are at the center of all conflict and the sacrifice of a victim brings about harmony until the next round of conflict escalation. Dr. Vern Redekop and Dr. Thomas Ryba break new ground in the Peace and Conflict Studies (PACS) field by applying Girard’s often-viewed controversial theory of violence to the reconciliation, forgiveness, and nonviolent processes of societies transitioning out of violence. This new study is a must read for PACS students, scholars, and practitioners as well as policymakers and NGOs.
— Sean Byrne, University of Manitoba
This book is an invitation and a gift to the conscience of humankind. It engages a seminal thinker as Rene Girard in conversations that are generative and promising for all those who are concerned by violence and its seduction. It is a new beginning for conflict resolution as a field of study.
— Andrea Bartoli, President, Sant'Egidio Foundation for Peace and Dialogue
Creative Reconciliation, an interdisciplinary, globally-contextualized anthology, engages and transcends Girardian mimetic and scapegoat theory to deal with diverse complexities of, and justification for violence amid the amazing litanies of reconciliation. The volume critiques violence and works for justice, blessing, and healing amidst dynamics of hermeneutics, truth-telling, mimesis, hospitality, and religion. It is a must read for anyone who deals theoretically and/or practically with systems of conflict, violence, and injustice; for anyone who hopes for a better world.
— Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan, Seminary of the Southwest
The authors marry an analytical “taxonomy of the human soul” with sophisticated psychological insights into identity, reconciliation, and justice. Like an artist blending a thousand colors into a masterpiece painting, this volume for the advanced peacebuilding expert brings into striking dialogue the resonant voices of important scholars.
— Lisa Schirch, Eastern Mennonite University
Through their broad exploration of Rene Girard’s notion of mimesis, the authors of this book provide a deep dive into the reality of identity-based conflict that often erupts from rage and envy. Such conflicts — in the family, down the hallway, in the workplace, and most of all between ethnic groups — are deep and even murderous. Through analysis, case studies, and wide ranging philosophical excursions the authors share the urgency and possibilities of reconciliation that can be fostered out of confrontation with the image of the Other within, and empathy that may emerge from true encounter with the Other that is without. This book provides a missing key to the reasons and ways of such reconciliation. Here’s hoping educators, conflict resolvers, policy makers, and local leaders will read and follow its wisdom.
— Jay Rothman, Bar Ilan University, author of From Identity-Based Conflict to Identity-Based Cooperation (2012)