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Vendetta e dovere
Sciacca, Fabrizio
2024
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Abstract
This study originates from the reflections articulated in Mafiacraft, delving into the complex interplay between vengeance, duty, and honour within cultural, anthropological, and legal frameworks. In the lexicon of Cosa Nostra, a breach of the “honour code” signals a failure to uphold the duty to truth, compelling acts of retribution. Vengeance emerges as a dual construct: both a private moral imperative and a mechanism for restoring social balance, yet fundamentally in tension with legal structures. Drawing on Raymond Verdier, it is understood as a communicative phenomenon central to the moral fabric of kin-based societies, while Edward Westermarck frames it as a juridical act, tethered to justice but devoid of the sacrificial and order-restoring function identified by René Girard. This inquiry examines vendetta’s mimetic dynamics—endless cycles of violence born from antagonistic symmetry—and contrasts them with the impartiality of legal adjudication, which seeks to disrupt such patterns. Ultimately, the analysis positions vengeance as a paradoxical moral obligation: a pursuit of justice that undermines social cohesion, underscoring the necessity of law’s mediating role to transcend retaliatory dualism through rational and equitable resolution.
Source
Fabrizio Sciacca, "Vendetta e dovere" in: "Etica & Politica / Ethics & Politics (2024) XXVI/3", EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, Trieste, 2024, pp. 305-312
Languages
it
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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