Abstract

This article is a comparison of two works of fiction, a film and a novel, that both address the question of how people deal with intense memories of tragic events from their past. Both works are characterized by crucial references to religious phenomena. In the Belgian cult horror film Calvaire and the bestselling Dutch novel These Are The Names, stories are told about the desire to restore what was lost. In order to deal with past realities, the characters in these works of fiction impose the past, in an imaginative form, upon the present, which inevitably seems to create violence and conflict. The introduction of violence, and the way this violence destroys identities as a means to restore a lost world, calls the possibility and credibility of restoration into question. In order to explore the phenomenon of restoration, we introduce a concept of substitution (inspired by René Girard) to investigate the power of violence in these two narratives. In Calvaire, violence leads to the perversion of identity, ultimately leading to the latter’s destruction, yet at the same time it can be understood to result in love and absolution. In These Are The Names, sacrificing acts first seem to bring a new beginning but in the end redemption is substituted by accusations of severe crimes. However, in this novel the past is also present in such a way that lost identities could be restored. How both stories look at the relation between past and present and in which way they present the possibility of restoring painful events, will be our main questions.

Highlights

  • Calvaire (Du Welz 2004), is a horror film in which a passer-by (Marc Stevens) is forced by the men of a remote Ardennes community to take up the role of a lost wife and lover

  • The two works are quite different in form, genre, and style, we were intrigued by similarities regarding the plot of substitution, the use of violence, the desire for redemption, and the question of coping with the past in the present

  • These themes inspired us to look at both works through the lens of René Girard’s idea of the scapegoat mechanism

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. These themes inspired us to look at both works through the lens of René Girard’s idea of the scapegoat mechanism This concept allows us to compare two rather different stories and explore the relation of outsider/group and the way this dynamic plays out in the dealing with tragic past events. With Aristotle, Ricoeur, and Nussbaum we argue that films like Calvaire and novels such as These Are The Names can change one’s own way of dealing with tragic memories. These works of fiction succeed in achieving this aim by depicting a specific story in a compelling and penetrating way. We will demonstrate how the two works of fiction can be seen as different readings of Girard’s main theory

Calvaire
Metamorphosis and Violence
The Illusion of Redemption
These Are The Names
Pontus Beg
Past and Present
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