Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Final Paper

Lisa Peters
Bible as Literature
December 1st

Wanda as Mary


                In reading the slave, I became interested to realize that Jacob was not the only one who could be called a slave. Wanda too is stuck in a village she hates, bound by social expectation and tradition and unable to escape and held hostage by the love she feels for Jacob. Only when they act upon their love do either Jacob or Wanda feel free.   
Jacob’s slavery is mentally and physically enforced.  “There was an agreement among them [the villagers] that any who saw him on the other side of the stream should immediately kill him” (pg 7). An earlier quote indicates Jacobs’s resignation to his fate. “There had been a time when Jacob had planned to run away, but nothing had come of it” (pg7). Like Jacob, Wanda is forced to remain in with her family, though she has little liking for them. “Stach’s death had brought her humiliation. She had been forced to return to her parents and again sleep with them and Basha in one bed…The hut stank. Her family conducted themselves like animals” (Pg 30).
Even more emotionally wrenching, Wanda is deeply in love with Jacob, but he refuses any advances she makes. “She had fallen in love with the salve at first sight, and though over the years they had been much together, he had stayed remote…but the strength of the attraction he exerted upon her did not abate…she was unable to free herself” (Pg 16).
            After Jacob and Wanda lay together, they develop a deep intimacy that goes beyond lust. “Jacob in the old days would have considered himself ridiculed if anyone had ever suggested to him that a time would come when he would discuss such matters as the freedom of will, the meaning of existence, and the problem of evil with a peasant woman. But one never knows where events are leading. He lay closed to Wnada in the granary, the same blanket covering them both, seeking to explain in a strange tongue those things he had studied in the holy books” (Pg81). Wanda even manages to pry Jacob loose from the intense attachment he has to his religion. “He had changed since he had cohabited with Wanda…He prayed but without concentration” (pg85).
            Later in the book, when ransomed by others from Josefov, Jacob goes to fetch Wanda from the village after dreaming of her, even though he believes it is wrong to do so. “Jacob’s longing for Wanda made him willing to brave any risk…even thought the journey must result in sin” (pg 133). In their love together, Jacob and Wanda find something precious and liberating. Becoming absorbed by Wanda, Jacob gives himself from the necessary distance to began to examine his slavery to his religion.
            In The Slave, Wanda fits Frye’s description of a redeeming feminine mythological symbol. Frye speaks of the way the sexual female in society represents Eve, who seduced Adam into sin. Yet by being the symbol for humanities downfall, Eve also sets up the proper method for humanity’s salvation; the Virgin Birth. Mary, a second Eve as Frye refers to her in pg 192, becomes the symbol for the new birth of humanity, one untainted by “the perversion of sexuality” a phrase found on pg 193. As the mother of Christ, Mary helps complete the full circle of humanity’s redemption.
            Wanda is the Eve and Mary of The Slave. In the book itself she is referred to as Eve.“Sarah was like Mother Eve, who had been formed from Adam’s rib, her husband her only relative” (pg 160). Like Eve, Wanda tempts her husband into sinful lust. Yet Wanda also fulfils the myth by redeeming him with her love.

All done

Here's my belated acknowledgement that I finished the Bible during Thanksgiving Break.
  Despite this being the third time reading revelations, I still don't understand it and a long in depth conversation with my mother (who has studied it up, down, right left and probably another direction as well) has not helped to clarify it any.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Notes From Oct 14th

Mirror of identiy (The Bible)
  engage somebody in the Bible and Blog about it (Aka argue)
How has the Bible influence literature? Blog about it
Talmud-authorized body of commentary on the Bible

Alegra's misererre-based on psalms 51
  "all the arts aspire to the condition of music"

Notes From Oct 12th

Read Suzanna and Peter Quince at the Clavier by Wallace Stevens. Blog about it.
Parataxis-literary form placing thigs side by side rather than subordinating elements

An argument About the Bible

One of my friends agreed to be my opponent in an argument of the Bible. This argument, which was based on the reliability of  the authority of the Old Testament in its influence on Christianity was similar in many respects to many other arguments I've had with people on the subject of the Bible. The most interesting and volatile arguments always seem to come up between my mother and I, and she is extremely well educated in the Bible, oftentimes pointing out obscure passages and interpreting them in ways I've never considered before. My argument with my friend was not as extensive but it was interesting in the fact that she offered the same bottom line as anybody else I've ever argued with. Faith. No matter how many mass slaughters, intertextual inconsistencies and improbable coincidences of similarities between the Bible and other great religious works, she remained unshaken in her answer. Faith answers everything. How can you argue with that? 

Susanna and Peter Quince


Clavier-depending on the language any sort of keyboard instrument or a specific keyboard instrument.
Just as my fingers on these keys
Make music, so the self-same sounds 
On my spirit make a music, too. 
Music is feeling, then, not sound; 
And thus it is that what I feel, The relationship between the music and the writing and their connection to emotions is interesting. Is he expressing his emotion in his music or creating emotion by playing music?
Here in this room, desiring you, Desiring who?
Thinking of your blue-shadowed silk, 
Is music. It is like the strain 
Waked in the elders by Susanna;
Of a green evening, clear and warm, 
She bathed in her still garden, while 
The red-eyed elders, watching, feltWhy are they red-eyed?
The basses of their beings throb 
In witching chords, and their thin blood 
Pulse pizzicati (Light plucking sound) of Hosanna (Which as I understand to be a cry for help in the archaic sense and a shout of praise in more recent usage, such as in hymns).
II
In the green water, clear and warm, 
Susanna lay. 
She searched 
The touch of springs, 
And found 
Concealed imaginings. 
She sighed, 
For so much melody.
Upon the bank, she stood 
In the cool 
Of spent emotions. 
She felt, among the leaves, 
The dew 
Of old devotions.
She walked upon the grass, 
Still quavering. 
The winds were like her maids, 
On timid feet, 
Fetching her woven scarves, 
Yet wavering.
A breath upon her hand 
Muted the night. 
She turned -- 
A cymbal crashed, 
Amid roaring horns. The music becoming abruptly harsh
III
Soon, with a noise like tambourines, 
Came her attendant Byzantines.

Against the elders by her side;
And as they whispered, the refrain 
Was like a willow swept by rain. Beautiful imagery, but it confuses me
Anon, their lamps' uplifted flame 
Revealed Susanna and her shame. Indication that something did indeed happen, rather than Susanna remaining resistant as in the Biblical story
And then, the simpering Byzantines 
Fled, with a noise like tambourines.
IV
Beauty is momentary in the mind -- 
The fitful tracing of a portal; 
But in the flesh it is immortal. Beauty momentary in the mind, eternal in the body-this is opposite what is expected
The body dies; the body's beauty lives. 
So evenings die, in their green going, 
A wave, interminably flowing. Wave of time
So gardens die, their meek breath scenting 
The cowl of winter, done repenting. 
So maidens die, to the auroral 
Celebration of a maiden's choral.
Susanna's music touched the bawdy strings 
Of those white elders; but, escaping, 
Left only Death's ironic scraping. 
Now, in its immortality, it plays 
On the clear viol of her memory, 
And makes a constant sacrament of praise.

  This poem appears to be about beauty, and specifically about the beauty and immortality of art, such as poetry, music or the literature of the Bible. The narrator of the poem seems to make a certain point of separating the passion he feels for his type of beauty and the lust of the Elders for Susanna's beauty. The Elder's  lust, aroused by "Susanna's music" , the beauty of her body, is on an instinctive level ,and is fleeting and doomed to nothing, while Peter Quince's idea of true beauty is to create something from his feelings that will last in "in its immortality" a "constant sacrament of Praise".  A reader of this poem and the Bible can make an instant connection with the beauty and immortality, spoken of, and the great piece of art that the poet drew his inspiration from.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Important!

Women in the Bible-Guest speaker (Linda Sexson) Attendence required

Women In the Bible-Guest Speaker Linda Sexson

1. Women-historical Figures or Socially Designation (Social Construction)
2.Female-Biological Category
3. Feminine-Symbol or Metaphor
1 and 3 are easily confused

monotheism   One God absorbs attributes of all E.G. Creation=Fertility a feminine trait

Eve is 1 [mother of all]
  Taking the rib from Adam to create Eve-separating male and female
      Rib-Te in some languages (Tiamat, Tiat Goddessses)
Anat-warrior Goddess

Repetitive Parallelism

Linda's law # 45-All Gods are metaphors

Zipporah-3
In Patriarchal societies phallic images ALWAYS take precedence over feminine (A women who hits a guy in the balls to save her husband must have her hand chopped off Deut.)

Lot and his Daughters-Moabites and Amenites, like Bastards Or SOB (Ancient insult)

Judges 19-The Levite and his Concubine/Wife
  Rules of hospitality are sacred

"Place your hand on my thigh" Testes are vows
     Foot may be a euphemism in bible

Amos-Hosea \
721-fall of Norther Kingdom--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Fall of Southern Kingdom
                                           Prophets appear to explain Israel's suffering
                                                 -Israel's fault for not worshipping correctly and not treating each other right
                                                       First consideration given to Social Justice
                                                        Cultic Purities

Hosea's Whore of a Wife=Israel

Jeremiah (And his Loincloth)

Teraphim-Household Gods
  Rachel's blood

1)Deborah
            2)Jael
                   3)Mother of Sisera
    The Decline
        !)Strong women who entered battle, even to the point of affirming masculinity [general who wouldn't go to battle without her] 2)Having to use trickery and deceit to establish power [killing enemy general with tent peg (Which head?)] 3)Women were spoils of war

  This lecture was especially interesting to me. I've noticed that sexist teachers of the Bible always used these women as justification for male dominated societies, while PC teachers always completely avoid mentioning them. I also noticed several correlations between Linda Sexson's literary perspective of Women and the Bible and ideas discussed in a Sociology of Gender class I took last year, especially the repression of women being a Social Construction and appearing in customary traditions (like the isolation of a woman while she is having her period).

Notes from September 28th

The Scattering
Portable religion---[God in a box] becomes integral to displaced Jews
Zionism-return to homeland
Christians-Jesus was Messiah Jews-Messiah hasn't come yet Islam-?

Notes from September 21st

Polysemous-many meanings
"All literature is displaced myth" N. Frye
"According to J, the moral of the story IS the story" P. Sexson
Lilith
Etiology-study of causation
Axis Mundi

Different Levels of Reading Literature
1. Descriptive
2. Poetic
3. Metaphor

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Genisis and Exodus

  I've finally found the trick to reading the Bible while ignoring the all the outside information my subconscious brain-inundated with years and years of preachers, Sunday-school teachers, biblical authors and parental scolding-keeps trying to interject. The Bible, Genesis and Exodus in particular, is an Edward Rutherford book! Read it like an epic historical novel that spans an immense amount of time and focuses on a particular tribe of people-the Jews-and its possible to focus on its literary value instead of its role as the guidebook for one religion or another.

Monday, September 13, 2010

What is an ephod?

A question posed in class was "What is an ephod?" and I happened to have the answer because I also had the question. An ephod is a breastplate, usually made of linen with the "Twelve stones of Israel" embedded upon it. The twelves stone respresent the twelve sons of Jacob and the twelve tribes of Israel. My computer won't let me post an image, but if you go to http://www.templemountfaithful.org/Newsletters/2001/5761-9.htm they have an image of one and of the twelve stones.
Random Fact- According to the Talmud, the wearing of the ephod atoned for the sin of idolatry on the part of the Children of Israel.

Acronym

Acronym for the Bible in Seven Words


Create
Excellence,
Love
Wittiness
and
Prepare
Great
Answers
for your teacher

Notes from September 9th

New Testement divisions
  Gospels, letters/epistles

Bible in seven words 1)Creation 2)exodus (revolution) 3)Law 4)Wisdom 5)Prophecy 6)Gospel 7)Apocalypse (Revelation)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Documentary_hypothesis
http://web.cn.edu/kwheeler/genesis_texts.html

Redactors of the Bible
the Jahwist source ( J )


the Elohist source ( E )
the Deuteronomist ( D )
the Priestly source ( P )
 

Monday, September 6, 2010

Contradictions in Genesis One and Two

Genesis 1:25-27 "And God made the beast of the Earth after his kind, and the cattle after their kind, and everything that creepeth upon the earth after his kind: and God saw that it was Good. and God said, 'let us make man in our image, and after our likeness, and let them have dominion over the fist of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth on the earth. So God created man in his own image..."
Genesis 2:18 "And the Lord God said, "'It is not good that the man should be alone: I will make him a help meet for him'. And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air, and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof."
  So were the animal made first, or man? And if they are two different accounts as indicated by the writing style and different ways of identifying God, and if they contradict each other, does that make them disprove the authenticity of the Bible?
Did you know that if you type in Explanations of Contradictions in the Bible from a Biblical Perspective you only get a few sites where it does exactly that out of the hundreds of hits?
It is noticeable that in the priestly source, it is Aaron's staff that produces water from rocks, splits the sea, and casts plague over Egypt, whereas it is that of Moses in JE.
  P sure is worried about the authority of the clerics. If I recall correctly, he was also the one to push God as a transcendent figure, inaccessible to the common people, who never hesitates to punish wrongdoers. Not exactly the kindest, most caring God.  
  This method of pushing God away seems contrary to what I recall of even the most basic traditions of other ancient religions, who offered a plethora of physical idols and cosmological events as proof of their Gods' existence. Is the Priest's account of such a vengeful god a way to make him more active in the Jewish people's life, since he was never seen in the presence of an object? (Not counting the Ark).

Notes from Thursday Sept 3rd

Old Testament=Hebrew Scriptures
The Apocryphal book of Suzanna(sp?) will become an important text later in the semester
Torah=The Law (First five books of the Bible)
*Lacuna=gap or lack (Where was Cain's wife before she was his wife? If Adam and his sons were the first, so presumably only people, who was it who was going to kill Cain for the Mark on his Forehead?)
Find the difference between Genesis Ch's 1 and 2 and the Discrepancies between the Jehovist and Priestly accounts