
Bibliography of Mimesis in History & Theory Adorno, Theodor W. and Horkheimer, M. (2002). Dialectic of Enlightenment: Philosophical Fragments. Stanford: Stanford University Press. Alphen, E. Van. (1991). The other within. In R. Corbey & J. Leerssen (Eds.), Alterity, Identity, Image. Selves and others in society and scholarship. Amsterdam; Atlanta: Rodopi, 1-16. Andrade, G. (2002). Marxismo y teoría mimética. Frónesis: revista de filosofía jurídica, social y política, 9(1), 107–125. Aristóteles. (2010). Poética. (E. De Sousa, Ed.). Lisboa: Imprensa Nacional - Casa da Moeda. Auerbach, E. (2009). Mimesis: a representação da realidade na literatura ocidental (5a ed.). São Paulo: Perspectiva Barry, A. (2005). Events that matter. London. Presented at the Workshop on Gabriel Tarde, University of London Senate House [Online Version]. Barry, A., & Thrift, N. (2007). Gabriel Tarde: imitation, invention and economy. Economy and Society, 36 (4), 509–525. Baud, M. (1997). Imagining the Other. Michael Taussig on Mimesis, Colonialism and Identity. Critique of Anthropology, 17 (1), 103–112. Bender, C. (2009). “Transgressive Objects” in America: Mimesis and Violence in the Collection of Trophies during the Nineteenth Century Indian Wars. Civil Wars, 11 (4), 502–513. Bender, D. (1996). Imitation. Encyclopedia of Rhetoric and Composition: Communication from Ancient Times to the Information Age. Garland Pub. Benjamin, A. (1991). Art, mimesis and the avant-garde. Aspects of a philosophy of difference. London: Routledge. Benjamin, W. (1979). Doctrine of the similar (1933). New German Critique, 17 (Special Walter Benjamin Issue), 65–69. Benjamin, W. (2005). On the mimetic faculty. In M. W. Jennings, H. Eiland, & G. Smith (Eds.), Walter Benjamin: Selected Writings 1931-1934 (Volume 2, part 2). Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 720–722 Bhabha, H. (1984b). Representation and the colonial text: a critical exploration of some forms of mimeticism. In F. Gloversmith (Ed.), The Theory of Reading. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 93-122. Bhabha, H. (1994b). The location of culture. London; New York: Routledge. Bhabha, H. (1997). Of mimicry and man: the ambivalence of colonial discourse. In F. Cooper & A. L. Stoler (Eds.), Tensions of empire: colonial cultures in a bourgeois world. Berkeley: University of California Press, 152-160. Blackburn, J. (1979). The White Man. The first response of aboriginal peoples to the White Man. New York: New York Times Books. Blackman, L. (2007). Reinventing psychological matters: the importance of the suggestive realm of Tarde’s ontology. Economy and Society, 36 (4), 574–596. Blackmore, S. J. (1999). The meme machine. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Boyd, J. D. (1968). The function of mimesis and its decline. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Brown, R. H. (Ed.). (1995). Postmodern representations. Truth, power, and mimesis in the human sciences and public culture. Urbana; Chicago: University of Illinois Press. Caillois, R. (1984). Mimicry and legendary psychasthenia. October, 31, 16–32. Candea, M. (Ed.). (2010). The social after Gabriel Tarde. Debates and assessments. London: Routledge. Carvalho, C. (2002). Ambiguous representations: power and mimesis in colonial Guinea. Etnográfica, VI (1), 93–111. Ceia, C. (n.d.). Mimesis. E-dicionário de termos literários [online version]. Chavalarias, D. (2003a). Human’s meta-cognitive capacities and endogenization of mimetic rules in multi-agents models. Presented at the first conference of the European Social Simulation Association, hosting the SIMSCO VI workshop, Groningen, Netherlands [online version]. Chavalarias, D. (2004). Metareflexive Mimetism: the prisoner free of the dilemma. Colloquium on Violence and Religion, Abiquiu, United States of America [online version]. Chavalarias, D. (2006). Metamimetic Games: modeling metadynamics in social cognition. 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The poetry of philosophy: on Aristotle’s poetics. South Bend, St. Augustine’s Press. Deger, J. (2006). Shimmering screens. Making media in an aboriginal community. University of Minnesota Press. Derrida, J. (1981). Economimesis. Diacritics, 11, 3–25. Diamond, E. (1997). Unmaking mimesis. Essays on feminism and theater. London: Routledge. Dias, N. (2005). Imitation et Anthropologie. Terrain, 44, 5–18. Donald, M. W. (2005). Imitation and Mimesis. In S. Hurley & N. Chater (Eds.), Perspectives on Imitation. From Neuroscience to Social Science, Volume 2: Imitation, Human Development, and Culture. Cambridge, The MIT Press, 282–300. Dorsey, P. A. (1996). Becoming the Other: The mimesis of metaphor in Douglass’s My Bondage and My Freedom. PMLA, 111 (3), 435–450. Durix, J.-P. (1998). Mimesis, genres and post-colonial discourse. Deconstructing magic realism. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan. Eaton, N. (2004). Between mimesis and alterity: art, gift, and diplomacy in colonial India, 1770- 1800. 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Interior Colonies: Frantz Fanon and the politics of identification. Diacritics, 24 (2/3), 19–42. Gable, E. (2002). Bad Copies: the colonial aesthetic and the Manjaco-Portuguese encounter. In D. Landau, Paul, Kaspin (Ed.), Images and empires. Visuality in colonial and postcolonial Africa. Berkeley: University of California Press. Gallese, V. (2009). The two sides of mimesis: Girard’s mimetic theory, embodied simulation and social identification. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 16 (4), 21–44. Gebauer, G., & Wulf, C. (1995). Mimesis: culture, art, society. Berkeley: University of California Press. Gell, A. (1998). Art and agency. An anthropological theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Gil, F. (1984). Mimésis e negação. Lisboa: Imprensa Nacional - Casa da Moeda. Girard, R. (1988). The double business bound. Essays on literature, mimesis, and anthropology. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Girard, R. (2008). Mimesis and theory. Essays on literature and criticism, 1953-2005. (R. Doran, Ed.). Stanford: Stanford University Press. Goodwin, D. (1992). Imitatio and eighteenth-century rhetorics of reaffirmation. Rhetorica, 10 (1), 25–50. Grandmaison, O. L. C. (2009). De l’assimilation à la “politique d’association”. La République impériale. Politique et racisme d’État. Paris: Editions Fayard, 107-211. Graubard, A. (2004). The Edge of Surrealism: A Roger Caillois Reader, edited by Claudine Frank. Duke Univ. Press Durham, NC , 2003 . 423 pp., “Review” in Leonardo, 37 (4), 343–343. Grosse, P. (2003). Turning Native? Anthropology, German Colonialism, and the Paradoxes of the “Acclimatization Question,” 1885-1914. In H. Glenn Penny and Matti Bunzl (Ed.), Worldly Provincialism: German Anthropology in the Age of Empire. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 179-197. Guarné, B. (2008). On Monkeys and Japanese: mimicry and anastrophe in orientalist representation. Digithum, 10, 26–36. Halliwell, S. (2002). The aesthetics of mimesis. Ancient texts and modern problems. New Jersey: Princeton University Press. Hanssen, B. (2004). Language and mimesis in Walter Benjamin’s work. In D. Ferris (Ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Walter Benjamin. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Harrison, R. (2003). “The magical virtue of these sharp things”: mimesis, colonialism and knapped bottle glass artefacts in Australia. Journal of Material Culture, 8 (3), 311–336. Harrison, S. (2002). The politics of resemblance: ethnicity, trademarks, head-hunting. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 8 (2), 211–232. Harrison, S. (2006). Fracturing resemblances. Identity and mimetic conflict in Melanesia and the West (EASA Serie). New York; Oxford: Berghahn Books. Hellweg, J. (2006). Manimory and the Aesthetics of Mimesis: Forest, Islam and State in Ivoirian Dozoya. Africa: The Journal
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