During the high tide of theory in the early Eighties, René Girard was the critic who received most honour in his own country and least in the Anglo-Saxon world. As early as 1981, the year before the publication of Le Bouc émissaire (The Scapegoat), his most accessible book, Girard, a professor at Stanford, was at number 14 in the magazine Lire's hitparade of French intellectuals, while Derrida and Baudrillard were not even in the top 40.
LRB 10 March 1994 | PDF Download
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