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Enjoy the winning essays from 2012, 2011 and 2010 Raven Foundation Essay Contests.

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To broaden awareness of mimetic theory, the Raven Foundation sponsored a contest for the essay that best communicates the theme of the 2012 Colloquium on Violence and Religion (COV&R) conference, Apocalypse Revisited: Japan, Hiroshima, and the Place of Mimesis, to mainstream audiences. The submissions covered many interesting topics. The essay, Meanders of Evangelization in Asia, by Marcin Kaznowski has been awarded first prize. Honorable Mentions were earned by Luke Nelson for Taxi Driver, Mishima, and Suicidal Aesthetic and L.G. Marincowitz for Unravelling Nigeria's Violence!


All three papers will be presented by their authors at the conference in July in Tokyo, Japan.

 

First Prize Winner

Meanders of Evangelization in Asia pdf_icon

Author Marcin Kaznowski was born in Przemyśl, Poland. After studying at the University of Mining and Metallurgy in Cracow (computer science at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Automatics, and Electronics) and receiving the degree Master of Science, Marcin began his studies at the Theological Seminary of the Salesian Society in Cracow. Upon receiving his Master of Theology from the Pontifical University of John Paul II in Cracow, he continued his studies there for a doctorate in dogmatic theology. In 2011, Marcin earned a Canonical licentiate for dogmatic theology. He is a Member of the Salesian Society (SDB).

 

Honorable Mentions

Taxi Driver, Mishima, and Suicidal Aesthetic pdf_icon

Author Luke Nelson is a freelance writer in Los Angeles, CA. He graduated from Calvin College in Grand Rapids, MI and later received an M.F.A. in Cinema-Television from the University of Southern California. His interests center on mimetic theory and the scapegoat mechanism’s application to Hollywood’s entertainment culture and American religious subculture.

 

Unravelling Nigeria's Violence!  pdf_icon

Author L.G. Marincowitz is a lecturer in philosophy at Monash University, South Africa. His interests lie in the social, political and religious realm that intellectual engagement brings. An avid Girardian scholar, he passionately applies these insights to South Africa and the African situation. He completed a masters degree at University of Johannesburg entitled Forgiveness: A Philosophical Exploration of Paul Ricoeur and Rene Girard. As a student and social activist he was involved in a number of organisations, and served for 3 three years as a politically appointed Commissioner of Youth in the Gauteng provincial government, responsible for policy and programme development. Recent work has included mentoring at youth camps for teenagers around issues of personal development.

Susan Drawbaugh won the $50 Amazon gift card in the Reflect and Be Rewarded Contest.

Wednesday, 16 March 2011 16:37

2011 Raven Foundation Essay Contest Winners

To broaden awareness of mimetic theory, the Raven Foundation sponsored a contest for the essay that best communicates the theme of the 2011 Colloquium on Violence and Religion (COV&R)conference, Disorder/Order in History and Politics, to mainstream audiences. The submissions covered many interesting topics. The essay, Ordered Disorder: Images of the Holocaust and World War II in Pink Floyd’s The Wall, by Dr. Phil Rose has been awarded first prize. Honorable Mentions were earned by Jeremiah Alberg for Sacrificing Idols in Tokyo and Aric Haley for To Kingdom Business Bound. 

 

The prize winning submission by Phil Rose, Ph. D., a teacher in the department of Communications Studies at York University in Canada is titled Ordered Disorder: Images of the Holocaust and World War II in Pink Floyd’s The Wall. In his essay, Rose explores The Wall outlines a powerful theory of individual and collective violence. The submissions earning Honorable Mentions are Jeremiah Alberg's Sacrificing Idols in Tokyo and Aric Haley's To Kingdom Business Bound: Theocratic Corporatism’s Mimetic Ambition to Create a Global Christian Order.

 

All three papers will be presented by their authors at the conference in June at the island of Salina, Sicily /Italy.

 

First Prize Winner

Ordered Disorder: Images of the Holocaust and World War II in Pink Floyd’s The Wall  pdf_icon

Author Phil Rose (PhD, York University) currently teaches in the department of Communication Studies at York University. His research interests include the evolution and history of symbol systems and communications media, from the origins of symbolic thought to the most recent technological developments; social and cultural issues related to literacy; and concerns pertaining to technology and violence, particularly in relation to the mimetic theory of René Girard. His doctoral dissertation, titled Pragmatism Not Idealism: Radiohead, Technopoly, and the Global Movement for Change, incorporated all of these areas and represents an appraisal of technological change at the dawn of the digital age as articulated in the work of the contemporary British musical group Radiohead—particularly the band's 1997 work Ok Computer. He is also the author of the book Which One’s Pink? The Concept Albums of Roger Waters and Pink Floyd (1998). 

 

Honorable Mentions

Sacrificing Idols in Tokyo  pdf_icon

Author Jeremiah Alberg was born in California, hence his sunny disposition. He was raised in the Mid-west, hence his solid good sense, and has spent the greater part of his adult life in Japan or Europe, hence his international flair. He is the celebrated author A Reinterpretation of Rousseau: A Religious System (over 50 weeks not on the New York Times Bestseller List). In addition to doing research on Immanuel Kant, he is being spoiled by his wife, Yumi, and raised by his two daughters, Hannah and Yuriko.  

 

To Kingdom Business Bound: Theocratic Corporatism’s Mimetic Ambition to Create a Global Christian Order pdf_icon

Author Aric Haley is a data systems implementation specialist in metro Detroit. He lived abroad while volunteering with a number of Protestant missions in the Middle East and Sub-Saharan Africa, but is now more interested in helping people of different faiths and cultures learn to live together than proselytize each other. His current interests include writing mimetically-aware science fiction, exploring interdividual theories of psychology, obsessing over East/West relations, and promoting compassionate policy objectives. He occasionally tweets shamelessly @postrevivalist.

To broaden awareness of mimetic theory, the Raven Foundation sponsored a contest for the essay that best communicates the theme of the 2010 Colloquium on Violence and Religion (COV&R) conference, Transforming Violence:  Cult, Culture, and Acculturation, to mainstream audiences. The submissions covered a wide range of topics including gossip, the Warsaw ghetto, misbehaving footballers, the television series Mad Men, the atomic bomb, and the blockbuster movie Avatar

 

The prize winning submission by Matthew Packer, Assistant Professor of English at Buena Vista University in Storm Lake is titled “Better at Being American than America”: The Chinese Copy, Too – Like We Do. In his essay, Packer highlights the economic mimicry and rivalry growing between the United States and China. The submissions earning Honorable Mentions are Vanessa Avery’s Watchmen and Mimetic Theory:  Are We Ready for Rorschach?, Benjamin Barber’s South Park: Wannabes, Victims and The Death Camp of Tolerance and Anthony W. Bartlett’s Dissing or Kissing.

 

All three papers were presented by their authors at the conference in Notre Dame at a panel moderated by Adam Ericksen on Friday afternoon, July 2, 2010. Appearing left to right: Keith Ross, Adam Ericksen, Suzanne Ross, Vanessa Avery-Wall, Matthew Packer and Ben Barber.

Raven_Essay_Contest_Winners_web

 

Anthony Bartlett's play, Dissing or Kissing, was performed as a Readers' Theater piece on Thursday, July 1 by the cast of Stacey Gassman, Susannah Bartlett, Dorothy Whiston, Stephanie Perdew Van Slyke with a special appearance by Anthony Bartlett as René Girard. Enjoy the show!

Dissing_or_Kissing_web

 

First Prize Winner

“Better at Being American than America”: The Chinese Copy, Too – Like We Do. pdf_icon

Author Matthew Packer is an assistant professor of English at Buena Vista University in northwest Iowa. He holds degrees from West Virginia University (Ph.D.) and Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, and prior to BVU he was a visiting assistant professor at the University of Portland, Oregon. His areas of interest include mimetic theory, cultural anthropology, and American and Pacific Rim literature. He recently led a student travel course to China and has received a McCorkle Fellowship to lead a faculty research trip to Japan this summer.

 

Honorable Mentions

Watchmen and Mimetic Theory:  Are We Ready for Rorschach?  pdf_icon

Author Vanessa Avery holds degrees from Yale Divinity School, King's College London, and McGill University. She is currently pursuing a PhD in Theology at Hartford Seminary in conjunction with the University of Exeter. Her dissertation addresses how Judaism has processed Rene Girard's notions of mimetic rivalry and scapegoating through aspects of its scripture, theology and ritual. Vanessa is an Adjunct Instructor of Religion at Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut; a consultant on issues pertaining to religious, cultural, and international diversity; and operates as Hartford Seminary's Admissions Manager. She has authored Religious Diversity: A Practical Guide for Corporate Managers & Healthcare Providers, in addition to articles on religion, diversity, and experiential learning.

South Park: Wannabes, Victims and The Death Camp of Tolerance   pdf_icon

Author Ben Barber is a student of literary and pedagogical theory at the University of Victoria, Canada. He joined COV&R in 2008 at the UCLA Riverside conference and attended COV&R again in 2009, where he earned The Raymond Schwager Memorial Award for his paper entitled, “Missionary Colonialism’s Double Bind and the Resulting Postcolonial Crisis in Shani Mootoo’s Cereus Blooms at Night.” He has recently prepared a paper entitled “The Rum Diary: An Introduction to Hunter S. Thompson’s Esthetic Evolution,” which will appear in the 2010 fall issue of Anthropoetics: The Journal of Generative Anthropology. His current interests include comparative research into the theory of Slavoj Žižek and René Girard; the life and work of Hunter S. Thompson; and the novels of Cormac McCarthy. Ben is looking ahead to graduate work, which will consider modernist and contemporary literature alongside Mimetic Theory and Generative Anthropology.

Dissing or Kissing  pdf_icon

Author Anthony Bartlett studied at the Jesuit Athaneum, Oxon, England, for a License in Philosophy (1969), and then at Heythrop, University of London, for a Bachelor of Divinity (1973), followed by a year at the Lateran University, Rome. He received his Ph.D. at Syracuse University NY, 1999.  He was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in 1973 and resigned the ministerial priesthood in 1984. He worked subsequently as director of a shelter and rehab center for homeless men in London’s East End. Before coming to the U.S.A. he was a frequent contributor to a religious affairs column in the Guardian newspaper. He taught as Assistant Professor of Theology at Bexley Hall Episcopal Seminary, Rochester NY, 2005-08, and recently as an adjunct at GTS. With his wife, Linda, he is the founder of Wood Hath Hope, a bible study community in Syracuse (www.woodhathhope.com). He is also a co-founder of Theology and Peace, an annual conference organization promoting theological development out of mimetic anthropology. His next book, Virtually Christian, How Christ Changes Human Meaning and Makes Creation New (O-Books, England) is due out November this year.