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Levitus, deconstruction and the body
Francis Landy
Introduction
1.1 Let us call deconstruction the practice of resistance to totalizing
discourses, to the desire for coherence and sense, the attribution of words
to a master program that unbinds, disaffiliates, as it juggles and congeals,
and let us call feminism the practice of resistance to totalizing
hierarchies, an attention to the disenfranchised other, the libidinal voice,
face that calls the text to an encounter ever dissimulated, and the body,
that discordant, wretched body, body of the text, of the rose…gurgles and
whistles in the night, to the sound of dreams.
1.2 And the Bible, we mustn't forget the hoary Bible, whose sexual
proclivities are surely its business, was there ever a time when its locks
hung heavy with dew, outside the door of the Beloved? Yet it has its lovers,
greedy for its flesh, or its penis. Oh the pathos of old men, the aged
hierarchs, in the garden of Susanna.
2.Leviticus as Pornography
2.1 Last term I had the privilege of teaching a course on Leviticus, one of
those courses in which I knew much less than my students. Leviticus, a
constructed text if ever there was one, an imagination, imaginaire, of an
ideal changeless social and sacred order, about the maintenance of the clean
and proper body of man and woman, Israel and God, and a text about the
transactions and processes of the body. One student wrote about Leviticus as
pornography, in comparison with Ezekiel. For him, the chapters on sexual
transgression homologised women with the forbidden world of idolatry (an
argument rather similar to Robert Carroll's)[2]; he was
interested by the absence of Ezekiel's excremental fantasy in Leviticus,
except in the pornoprophetic chapter 26, and its replacement by imagery of
annihilation. I did not agree with the simple reduction of women to idolatry;
the chapters spend too much of their time imagining illicit sexual behaviour
(and, of course, attributing it to the demonised other, Egypt and Canaan).
Imagining deviance represents desire, a desire projected outward and
proscribed, but assumed to be ever-present and insidious. Look at the piling
up of terms of reprobation: hmz,
hb(wt, lbt, dsx,
hdn.[3] Why all the excitement? And what is its
obverse? Is it jouissance, as Kristeva suggests in her discussion of
abjection?[4] It may be terror at the loss of boundaries,
interfamilial, inter-species, across genders, the loss of self. The self, like
the life force, the #$pn, is always leaking. The
attraction and peril of the other side can be felt most insistently when the
text switches subject position. For instance, in 20.18, it tells us,
tautologously, that "she (the menstruant) has uncovered the source of her
blood"
(hymd rwqm t) htlg )yhw).[5]
Why evoke the subjectivity of the woman? Or her agency? Is it for the sake
of the striptease, identification with the object of the gaze as a means of
annulling the gaze? What is exposed, however, is not her body but her blood,
turning her inside out. The gaze perhaps recoils at the sight, or revels in it
- they both seem to be scrabbling to take off her clothes, and the man does
lie with her. Is it a desire for the blood, the impure female blood, that
escapes from its enclosure, and threatens to overwhelm, to engulf the penis?
There is the curious juxtaposition of the purificatory, life-giving metaphor
of "source", rwqm, and blood, the
contaminating waste product of reproduction. Richard Whitekettle persuasively
argues that the womb in Leviticus corresponds to the waters of chaos in
Genesis 1.2, which have to be contained for creation to unfold.[6]
The feminine principle then seems antonymic to God. This, as we shall see,
is too simple. The man at any rate seems to be in touch with, to feast upon
her essence, the source of her blood; sperm and uterine blood are an explosive
mixture. But he does so through her eyes, imagining his, stripping for his
delectation, being turned on by his pleasure. Pleasure feasts on pleasure. Is
this a masculine fantasy? Indeed. His own nakedness, self-exposure, is so
carefully occluded. The male is left intact, immune from exposure.[7]
But it may respond to, recognize, her own experience; at the very least it
posits it, as a counterpoise to the dominant rhetoric of the book. We can
imagine her exhibitionist pleasure, and his voyeurist delight, infused with
that of the book, which seeks to render its fascination, its nakedness,
invisible. The erasure to which they are both consigned ("they shall be
cut off from their people")[8] maintains the couple's
(or text's) jouissance outside history and society, in a perhaps secretly
indulged forbidden archive.
2.2 The insistent imagery, "uncovering nakedness" (hwr(
hlg),[9] "kinship flesh" (r)#$)
etc. suggests a desire to perceive , along with the desire for intercourse, and
a primal identification - the unity of kinship becoming the union of flesh. What
is concealed? Perhaps our bare humanity/animality. The woman who draws near (brqt)
to the beast, the opposite of the sacrificial exploitation of animals, through
bringing them near (brq) to the altar.[10]
Uncovering nakedness recalls the innocent nakedness of Genesis 2, and the
quasi-incest of the first couple. Eden then is identified with Canaan and Egypt,
the lands said to engage in forbidden practices (Lev.18.2, 27, 20.23-24). The
ideal world of Leviticus then supercedes and represses the primordial one -
hence its insecurity. We are close to the "feminist discourse on
embodiment" as well as the polymorphous sexual imagination of the Song of
Songs.
3. Leviticus and Land
3.1 Another essay, very polished, dealt with the land, the female complement or
partner of God, in which he is immanent. The land is the object of care
throughout the book, and the image, the foundation, of its coherence: Israel's
dwelling in the land is the condition for God's indwelling and for the social
and literary structure that makes it possible. It is an ideal vision of the
future. Except that the future is already foreclosed. Even before arrival, we
imagine exile. The book is reft with intimations of failure. From the death of
Nadab and Abihu to the threat or prediction that the land will vomit you out
to the culminating apocalypse, there is no doubt that the world of Leviticus
will not happen. It is thus a self-negating book, one which posits a world
that will never happen. Remarkably, unlike Deuteronomy, it leaves us outside
the land.[11] There is no return. God remembers his
covenant with the ancestors, the term "covenant" recalling the
"eternal covenant of salt" (Mlw( xlm tyrb)
at the beginning (2.14).[12] And what does this mean? God
hugging the ancestral ghostly phallus, that symbol of patrilineage, in its
absence, and remembering the land. There is the arousal, especially given the
homonymity of "remember" and "male," and the anticipation
that God will insert the spectral penis into the land, but for the moment it
is waste, and this waste is apparently its Sabbath, its homeostasis, the
Sabbath that is the equivalent of the now desolate holy place.[13]
3.2 The word for memory, rkz, occurs also as the
"memorial portion," htrkza, that together
with the entire complement of incense, is offered up with the meal-offering in
chapter 2.[14] God is aroused by the fragrance (xwxn
xyr) of incense and wheat. Intertextually, the incense reminds one of
the Song of Songs, and the "heap of wheat, hedged with lilies," to
which the woman's belly is compared there (7.3). What is remembered, and what
is its relationship with masculinity, the logos that speaks throughout the
book and whose world, and land, it projects/protects? The sensuality of the
book is overtly alimentary, the sacrifices are the "food" of God
(Lev.22.8 etc.), but what about the other senses, and organs?[15]
4. The Blasphemer
4.1 Another student wrote about the narratives that disturb the serenity of
Leviticus, namely chapters 10 (the deaths of Nadab and Abihu) and 24 (the
blasphemer). I will look at the second of these. Narrative, presupposing
contingency and crisis, subverts the program of Leviticus, according to which
nothing ever changes. The narrative of chapter 24, so brief, so enigmatic,
apparently superogatory, challenges the entire social and literary structure
of the book. Two men fight: fighting encapsulates the violence that may or
will destroy society. Two men fighting is a motif, an emblematic
scene, throughout the Pentateuch[16] One of them is the son
of an Egyptian man and an Israelite woman; he is a typical representative of
the br br(, the punningly designated "mixed
multitude" that went up with Israel (Exod.12.38),[17]
and
hence of the hybridity Leviticus resolutely condemns.[18]
He
gives the lie to the pure and proper body of Israel. During the fight the man
curses the "name"; as the student who wrote on pornography pointed
out, the word for "curse," bqn, is the
root of hbqn, "female," and suggests an
invagination, a hollowing out, of the name of God. Desecration of the name and
its derivatives, such as the priestly patrilineage in 22.9, is the most
heinous of offences, the root offence, in Leviticus, and its ramifications
could lead us a merry dance. If the whole book is the working out of the name,
the language, of God, as suggested for instance by the metaphoric formula 'h
yn), "I am YHWH," then the curser threatens the entire sacred
and phallic order.
4.2 Nothing restores it, though God carries on as if nothing had happened. Two
solutions are attempted. One is rhetorical. God is consulted, and after
decreeing execution, proceeds to an apparently irrelevant trotting out of the
talionic formula. Here a fantasy of dismemberment is overlaid by assertion of
reciprocity. The second is the narrative account of the fate of the recreant,
who is taken outside the camp and stoned, after the witnesses have laid their
hands on him. The ceremonial obviously corresponds to the expulsion of the
scapegoat in Leviticus 16 and to the disposal of the ashes of the
sin-offerings outside the camp. It is also an inversion of the sacrificial
ritual, in which the donor or confessor places his hand on the animal before
the divine altar. The victim is removed from the camp, the microcosm of social
order, and the sacred fire at its centre; there he is crushed, bruised,
smashed, rendered unrecognisable as human, by the stones which configure the
earth, and, in this case, the desert.
4.3 Here we come to the essential ambiguity, also pointed out by this student.
For God is the God of the desert as well as the God of the camp, domesticated
at the heart of society. He is in the subject position of Azazel, as well as
its antithesis. This is shown, for instance, by the series of dizzying puns on
the word for "goat," ry(#: Edom,
whirlwind, terror, hair, all of which are more or less associated with the
theophany.[19] God is both outside as well as inside the
camp, identified with chaos as well as creation. The desert symbolises
non-life in the Pentateuch. The book inserts itself between and holds apart
the two aspects of God, preventing their destructive conjunction. But it also
anticipates the transformation of the land into the desert, its anti-Sabbath.
5. Concluding Reflections
5.1 I have engaged with these three students' interpretations, responsively,
reworking them through my own reflections, so as to emphasise the polysemic,
dialogic nature of all interpretation, deconstructive interpretation among
others. All three fit or involve both deconstructive and feminist discourses,
inevitably. Because the one cannot go without the other. I distrust any
insinuation that there is such a thing as "pure" deconstruction or
"pure" feminism, a clean and proper ideological paradise.
Deconstructing Leviticus means in part recovering the woman's voice in it, and
whatever else it stands for. Paying attention to the marginalization,
projection, and abjection of women in the text is part of the resistance to
its controlling discourse, his master's voice. Deconstruction and feminism do
not overlap entirely, however. Feminism, to begin with, has a particular
political profile, which deconstruction might well treat as being outside its
purview. The text, moreover, has complex allegiances. The world it imagines
corresponds partially to the feminist program in its resistance to political
hierarchies. It is a world without a king, without politics, controlling
elites, or long term accumulations of capital (if one excludes the anomalous
cities).[20] According to Milgrom, it is a world without
slavery, at least for Israelites.[21] Yet this is part of
its coherence, its sense.
5.2 Finally, what about embodiment? Leviticus lives in the minds and behaviours
perhaps of its interpreters, in the voices of its performers, and it is a
ghost of a book, whose true incarnation would have been in the bodies of
sacrificial animals, the satisfaction of the gleaners, the life and guts of
the society that would live by it. More than any other book of the Bible,
perhaps, it is a discourse of the body. Yet perhaps, more than any other book,
it conforms to the stereotype of male = spirit, logos, and female = body,
which needs to be controlled. Nancy Jay postulates that sacrificial cults are
patrilineal cults, which perpetuate thereby the myth of pure sacred male
descent..[22] Leviticus is an almost perfect example of this. It is one, however,
that is always breaking down. It is at this point that I no longer know where
to go.
6. ENDNOTES
1. Thanks are due to Skye Wylie,
Piotr Bobkowski, and Robert Simpson, for the stimulus they provided for this
paper, which was a contribution to a panel discussion on the "The Bible,
The Body and Feminism" at the Canadian Society of Biblical Studies meeting
in Sherbrooke, Quebec, in June 1999. A version of the paper appeared on the CSBS
Website in May, 1999, and was the basis of my informal presentation.
2. Robert Carroll, "Desire
Under the Terebinths: On Pornographic Representation in the Prophets - A
Response" in Athalya Brenner (ed.) A Feminist Companion to the Latter
Prophets (The Feminist Companion to the Bible 8; Sheffield: Sheffield
Academic Press, 1995), pp.275-308. Carroll argues that representations of women
in the "pornographic" chapters of some of the prophets are explicitly
metaphors, and no different in principle from similar representations of men,
animals, and plants. It is evident that this is not the case with Leviticus.
Athalya Brenner responded in "Pornoprophetics Revisited: Some Additional
Reflections" JSOT 70 (1996), pp.63-86. There is, however, much
common ground between Brenner and Carroll.
3. The terms appear to constitute a
specialized technical vocabulary, whose precise meaning, however, remains
totally obscure. hmz characterizes the relationship
of a man, mother and daughter or granddaughter in 18.17 and 20.14, as well as
the promiscuous priest's daughter in 19.29. Frymer-Kensky thinks that it
refers to incest outside blood-kinship relations (Tikva Frymer_Kensky, "Law
and Philosophy: The Case of Sex in the Bible" Semeia 45 p.101 n.15,
rep. in Alice Bach [ed.] Women in the Hebrew Bible, p.15). hb(wt
is used for homosexual intercourse in 18.22 and 20.13, and is a general term for
the entire code of sexual malpractice and the child sacrifice associated with it
in 18.26, 27, 29, and 30, suggesting homosexual intercourse is the paradigmatic
infraction. lbt is used for intercourse with animals
in 18.23, and with a man's daughter-in-law in 20.12; it is clearly derived
from llb, "mix", corresponding to Leviticus's
general anxiety about miscegenation. The connection between intercourse with
animals and with a daughter-in-law is not evident. dsx
only occurs in 20.17, the prohibition against intercourse with a half-sister.
The homonymity with the familiar dsx, "lovingkindness,
loyalty" (etc.), is striking, and may either be a coincidence or indicate a
metaphorical correlation. hdn describes a
relationship with a sister-in-law in 20.21, as well as being the normal term for
the state of separation of a menstruant and parturient woman. Again the
metaphorical connection is unclear. Howard Eilberg-Schwartz, The Savage in
Judaism: An Anthropology of Israelite Religion and Ancient Judaism
(Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University P., 1990), pp.183-84, suggests
that the association is with the childlessness consequent on the offence; this,
however, begs the question. The standard commentaries are not helpful in
explicating these terms. Calum M. Carmichael Law, Legend and Incest in the
Bible: Leviticus 18-20 (Ithaca: Cornell U.P., 1997) detects in the terms
allusions to patriarchal narratives. For instance, hdn
correlates menstruation with Onan's spillage of seed in 38.9 (p.173).
Carmichael is not always very consistent, however, and some of his examples seem
rather strained.
4. The complicity of abjection and
jouissance and the experience of overwhelming beauty is emphasised throughout Powers
of Horror (tr. Leon S. Roudiez; New York: Columbia U.P., 1982), for
instance, pp.9-10, 210, as well as, using different terms, Kristeva's other
work. Kristeva interprets Leviticus at length in Powers of Horror,
pp.90-111, as a thoroughgoing abjection of the primordial mother.
5. Another instance is 20.17, in which the
half-sister sees the nakedness of her half-brother, as well as vice versa.
6. Richard Whitekettle, "Levitical Thought and
the Female Reproductive Cycle: Wombs, Wellsprings, and the Primeval World,"
VT 46 (1996), pp.376-391.
7. In
contrast, in 20.17, concerning half-siblings, the gaze is mutual. The difference
between the two verses emphasises that the significance of the blood is
determinative in this instance.
8. The literature on the penalty of karet
is vast. For a summary of views, see Jacob Milgrom, Numbers (JPS Torah
Commentary 4; Philadelphia and New York: Jewish Publication Society, 1990),
pp.405-408, and Leviticus 1-16 (AB 3; New York: Doubleday, 1991),
pp.457-460. See also Baruch Levine, Leviticus (JPS Torah Commentary 3;
Philadelphia and New York, 1989), pp.241-42. Jean Soler, "The Dietary
Prohibitions of the Hebrews" New York Review of Books, June 14th
1979, p.25 argues that Israelite community is constituted by a series of
"cuts" which are the source of differentiation and hence signification
9. Howard Eilberg-Schwartz, God's
Phallus and Other Problems for Men and Monotheism (Boston: Beacon, 1994),
p.91, argues that the narratives of the Garden of Eden and Noah depict the
prohibition of nakedness as a "foundational moment"" in the
emergence of human culture. This might explain why the uncovering of nakedness
overshadows intercourse itself in the text.
10. In a wonderful discussion of how the poetics of
Leviticus is embodied through its rhythms and primary images, Franziska Bark,
'Listen your way in with your mouth'": A Reading of Leviticus," Judaism
48 (1999), pp.198-208, shows how the metaphor of "drawing near" (brq))
pervades the book, suggesting an approach to God that is never quite completed.
The approach to the animal would be the converse of the approach to God of the
book's dominant program; and as with it, the verb suggests a process of
approximation, rather than a final conjunction.
11. Of course, this is not the
conclusion of the book. Most critics regard ch.27 as an appendix. However, Mary
Douglas, in her stimulating structural reading of Leviticus, "The Forbidden
Animals in Leviticus" JSOT 59 (1993), pp.3-23, regards it as the
"latch" of the book (p.11), while Christopher R. Smith, "The
Literary Structure of Leviticus" JSOT 70 (1996), p.30, holds that it
intentionally mitigates the impact of ch.26. In fact, Leviticus posits three
endings: the two alternatives of ch.26 and the conclusion in ch.27. However, the
commination of 26.14-46 is clearly the culmination of the main historical scheme
of the book.
12. Outside ch.26, the word tyrb,
"covenant," only occurs in 24.8, where it is an attribute of the
shewbread.
13. David Damrosch comments on the "rich prophetic irony" of
the term in this passage (The Narrative Covenant: Transformations of Genre in
the Growth of Biblical Literature [San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1987],
p.292). The equivalence between the Sabbath and the sanctuary is established in
19.30 and 26.2. Israel Knohl sees this equivalence as being of central concern
to the Holiness Code (The Sanctuary of Silence: The Priestly Torah and the
Holiness School [Minneapolis: Fortress, 1995], p.16).
14. Vs.2, 9, and
16. The word also occurs in the summary of the offerings in 6.8, and in the poor
person's hattat offering in 5.12, where, however, it does not include incense,
since it is a sin offering. A comparable case is that of the sotah in
Num.5.26. The word is also used to describe the shewbread in 24.7, even though
they are not offered, reinforcing the linkage between chapters 2 and 24.
15. Alice Bach devotes a chapter
of her book Women, Seduction, and Betrayal in Biblical Narrative
(Cambridge: Cambridge U.P., 1997) to non-visual senses in the Hebrew Bible
("Wine, Women, and Death," pp.166-209), though she does not mention
Leviticus.
16. The motif occurs in Ex.2.13, 21.22, and
Deut.25.11-12, as well as our incident. The three legal cases have strong
structural connections: in each case, the fight is correlated with a
relationship with a woman, with aborted, miscegenated or violated generation or
generative organs, and with bodily mutilation. The theory that the sacrificial
system displaces the violence inherent in society is primarily associated with
René Girard (e.g. Violence and the Sacred [Baltimore: John Hopkins U.P,
1977]). Girard's thesis is clearly over-generalized; it cannot, for instance,
account for vegetable sacrifices. Nonetheless, violence is one of the
destructive forces whose presence can be detected throughout the book, e.g. in
the prohibition of vengeance in 19.18, and of standing by the "blood of
your neighbour" in 19.16.
17. The br br(o
can always be relied upon to blamed for any mischance to befall the Israelites.
See Num.11.4, where the word used is Psps). Levine, Leviticus,
p.166, holds that the blasphemer is further tarnished by his Danite ancestry,
since the Danites are associated with apostacy; Erhard S. Gerstenberger
maintains a judicious neutrality on the significance of the mother's lineage (Leviticus
[tr. Douglas Scott; OTL; Louisville: Westminster/John Knox, 1996], p.361).
18. The theory that the purity
system of Leviticus was motivated by a fear of category confusion was most
persuasively promoted by Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger (London: RKP,
1966), and has been the subject of much refinement and critique since, not least
by Mary Douglas herself. In her most recent work, such as "The Forbidden
Animals of Leviticus," she has adopted a much more moralistic hypothesis.
19. In Deut.33.2 and Jud.5.4, YHWH comes from Seir;
Hab.3.3 also represents him as emerging from the lands of the south (Teman and
Paran). Associations with the whirlwind are also frequent cf. II Kings 2.1, 11,
Ps.148.8, Job.38.1, 40.6. There are no representations of divine hair before
Daniel 7.9, but untrimmed hair is one of the conditions for the maintenance of
the sanctity of the Nazirite (Num.6.5). Nazirites, who constitute an occasional,
non-hereditary sacred order outside the sanctuary are symmetrically opposed to
the high priest, whose hair must not be allowed to become dishevelled (Lev.10.6,
21.10).
20. Norman Gottwald, "The Biblical Jubilee: In
Whose Interests?" in Hans Ucko (ed.) The Jubilee Challenge: Utopia or
Possibility? (Geneva: WCC Publications, 1997), pp.36-38 has recently argued
that the legislation of Lev.25 served the interests of the Jerusalem priestly
elite. Gottwald presupposes that all literature and legislation is reducible to
class interests. Contrary points of view are presented by Knohl, who holds that
the Holiness Code is the priestly response to the ethical challenge of the
eighth-century prophets (The Sanctuary of Silence, pp.199-224) and Robert
Kugler, "Holiness, Purity, the Body and Society: The Evidence for
Theological Conflict in Leviticus" JSOT 76 (1997), pp.3-27, who
argues that the Holiness Code is a lay composition which does not especially
serve the interests of priests. See also Bernard Harrison, "The Strangeness
of Leviticus" Judaism 48 (1999), pp.208-228, who contrasts the
community-oriented ethics of Leviticus with the individualistic morality of the
Enlightenment, itself a version of the Pauline stress on individual salvation,
and argues that this difference is one of the bases for post-Enlightenment anti-semitism.
Susan Shapiro, in her response to Harrison's and Bark's papers, aligns this
approach to Levinas's concept of "ethical proximity" ("Leviticus:
Drawing Near the Other," Judaism 48 [1999], pp.228-233).
21. "The Land Redeemer and the
Jubilee" in Astrid B. Beck (ed.) Fortunate the Eyes that See: Essays in
Honor of David N. Freedman in celebration of his seventieth birthday (Winona
Lake: Eisenbrauns, 1995), p.69. Of course, non-Israelites may still be enslaved
(25.44-46). See also "Leviticus 25 and Some Postulates of the Jubilee"
in The Jubilee Challenge, p. 30. Adrian Schenker, "The Biblical
Legislation on the Release of Slaves: The Road from Exodus to Leviticus" JSOT
78 (1998), pp. 23-41, argues that the legislation supplements that in Exodus and
Deuteronomy, and reflects a situation in which Israelites were disadvantaged in
relation to their foreign occupiers.
22.
Throughout Your Generations Forever: sacrifice, religion, and paternity
(Chicago: Chicago U.P.1992). Curiously, Jay's discussion of sacrifice in the
Hebrew Bible focusses entirely on the patriarchal narratives. For an interesting
critique of Jay, see Ivan Strensky, "Between Theory and Speciality:
Sacrifice in the 90s" RSR 22 (1996), pp. 13-17.
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