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The Symbolism of Violence

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dc.creator BIN-KAPELA, Victor B
dc.date 2022-02-22T06:50:55Z
dc.date 2022-02-22T06:50:55Z
dc.date 2022
dc.date.accessioned 2022-04-05T08:32:10Z
dc.date.available 2022-04-05T08:32:10Z
dc.identifier 2378-703X
dc.identifier http://41.93.33.43:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/655
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/78302
dc.description For centuries, history of nationshas shown that the recourse to violence has been the sine qua non condition for the establishment of peace, order, progress, expansions, and the like. Violence, no matter its form, is believed to be the means for peace, justice, or unity. On the contrary, this paper shows that violence calls for violence, for it is based on the mimetic desire, which is the principle of reciprocal violence. Basing on Frantz Fanon‟s description of violence as a liberating tool for decolonisation in Africa, the present reflections borrow theoretical tools from R.N. Girard and P. Ricoeur to show that violence hardly achieves permanent peace, justice, or unity in the human race. This is because its mechanism is rooted in desire for more-having, dominion, pride, cupidity, and arrogance leading to the negation of humanity in others. Any justification for violence constitutes an apparent meaning, which hides a more fundamental desire: the desire for more-being fuller being, that is to say, the plenitude of being. Its condition of possibility is not of material order. It is rather of moral order: the respect of human dignity.
dc.language en
dc.publisher AJHSSR
dc.subject symbolic language.
dc.title The Symbolism of Violence
dc.title A Giro-Ricoeurian Reading of Frantz Fanon


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