Hamas Revenge Fantasy (Virtual Reality)

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This little video clip produced by the armed wing of Hamas is going around the rightwing Jewish blogosphere. A virtual reality, this is what it looks like when the victorious Hamas fighters clear all the Jews out of liberated Palestine, and send them packing back on the boats for Germany. Not to make a political point, I’m posting this nasty little clip here at JPP simply for its inherent interest. It’s a peculiar combination of computer generated graphics, photographs of dead Palestinian babies, iconic figures from Israel, art historical images from the Roman destruction of the Temple, and so on. Everyone gets to feel good about it, everyone gets what they want. Supporters of Hamas can look forward to a future that they want to imagine. Rightwing Zionists get to gloat and to feel self-righteous. It’s a parody sung in Hebrew to Ha’tikvah, the Israeli national anthem.

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Kabbalah & Film (Pi) (More Darren Aronofsky)

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No Kabbalah without computers. And no computers without Kabbalah. Having gone to see Noah, I dutifully followed up with Pi, which I streamed on Netflix. Pi is Aronofsky’s surprise breakout film, which I saw when it first came out. It’s an “immature” work, but actually better than the bigger biblical blockbuster. Aesthetically consistent and uncompromised, the film races after its protagonist, Max Cohen, through and into black and white gritty streetscapes and chaotic claustrophobic New York Chinatown interiors. The Lower East Side circa 1997 is played as place of revelation.

Against his mother’s express command, Poor Max looked directly into the sun as a child, and now his entire mental life is permeated by numbers. The media of Pi are streaming consciousness, numbers, low high-tech systems, stock market figures, scenes shot from nature, computers, drugs, ants, letters, everything speeding up and in pain . Mathematics, Kabbalah, and the game Go center the universe. Without hiatus, Max thinks too much too fast looking for the patterns that will make sense of everything.

At last the 216 number name of God is revealed to Max by a computer program. Chased down by Wall Street agents and kabbalists, they all the want the name uttered by the High Priest on Yom Kippur in the Holy of Holies in the Temple in Jerusalem. Is it the messiah’s key to the Garden of Eden or just a number. The true name, Max learns, is between the numbers, not for us. He burns the printout paper with the name of God on it, and drills the computer chip that contains the program out of his head. The film ends with the release of a vision of wind blowing through trees in a downtown city park. It’s the tree of life in Chinatown. In the end, the entire manic operation is given up for a quiet vision with more balance.

I’m always interested in how religion gets played in film and in popular culture, and then how it gets reviewed by the professional critics. What do they get about religion? What do the miss? Here is Pi as presented by Stephen Holden in the NYT. “[W]ith its ink-stained cinematography and jarring electronic score by Clint Mansell, ”Pi” can be extremely grating.” Grating indeed, but so is Kabbalah. I like the way kabbalah and revelation are set into and intensified visually and sonically by the techno frame of the contemporary world. If, on the downside, Pi is an immature work, even silly and definitely overblown, on the upside, it looks like a comic strip, a gonzo comic strip about Kabbalah and spirituality, as if drawn by Eli Valley. Looked at that way, it’s a great looking film.

 

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Love in a Time of Capital (Symposium) (Yale University) (May 8-9, 2014)

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Pro-Creation (Noah) Castration (Genesis Rabbah)

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In the painting Ham Mocking Noah (1510-1515) by Bernardino Luini, Ham points his finger at his father mocking, while Noah looks like he’s looking under the blanket. What has happened to Noah that requires this painful self-examination? Something has gone badly wrong. For their part, I think the rabbis know, and it’s not pretty. It’s something that perhaps Luini and perhaps the Bible only intuit. The Noah story is a rough story and the rabbis make it rougher. Whatever it is that happened there,the ark is presented as a place of violence, prohibitions, and anxiety around sex, procreation, and divine justice.

The pivot of these anxieties revolves around the need to “go forth,” to leave the ark. In Genesis Rabbah (the rabbinic commentary to the book of Genesis), the story inside the ark is imagined this way. As if chained to a bad place, Noah is reluctant to leave the ark, and will only do so when God tells him to leave. Just as God told him to enter the ark, God will have to tell him to leave the ark (Gen. R. 34:4).  “To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose.” The rabbis cite Ecclesiastes (Eccls. 3:1) to comment that Noah did not want to leave the ark. “Am I to go out and beget children for a curse?” (Gen. R. 34:6). Indeed, that is the question. To get him to go out, God has to promise not to flood the world again. That’s the problem.

According to the rabbis, as soon as and for as long as they remained in the ark, Noah, his children, and their wives were forbidden to cohabit. Animals are brought into the ark “that they may swarm in the earth” and “be fruitful and multiply upon the earth.” By this the rabbis mean in and upon the earth, but not in the ark (Gen.R. 34:7-8). As we will see throughout the commentary to Noah in Genesis Rabbah, for the rabbis procreation is theomorphic. Linking the prohibition against murder with the prescription to reproduce, Ben Azzai is quoted as comparing the person who refrains from procreation to one who, no less, both sheds blood and impairs the likeness of God. Here’s the prooftext. In the Bible, the phrase “In the image of God made He man” (sic) is followed by “And you, be ye fruitful and multiply.” Let’s not forget that the rabbis are steeped in a Byzantine world full of mosaic images. In this world of iconic imagination, to procreate is to reproduce a divine image (Gen r.34:14).

In all of this, there’s room for doubts here, actually two doubts. It’s not lost on the rabbis the irony that Ben Azzai himself refrains from this particular matter, because, well, he studies Torah. This particular point is not given a lot of thought here. Rather, the compilers of Genesis Rabbah have a more pressing set of doubts regarding God. Still commenting on “going forth” from the ark, R. Meir compares God to a judge who screens himself off from the world. God is compared to “a judge before whom a curtain is spread, so that he does not know what is happening without.” His colleagues warn R. Meir that he has said enough. The text then goes on to change the subject. The rabbis describe the fecundity of the generation consumed by the flood, when women birthed after only a three day, or a one day pregnancy, their little ones “sent forth like flock.” The reference here is to Job (21:11). But the theological question concerning the judgment of God is left unanswered. The rabbis want to know who was there to say to God, “You have not done well.” Why, they ask, did God hide God’s face from that generation?

This running commentary begins to look like a dyptich, with Noah on one side and Job on the other. For the rabbis, the answer, if that’s what it is, to the theological problem raised by R. Meir has to do with the capacity of a single person to regenerate the human race (Gen R 36:1).  Again citing the book of Job, the rabbis turn to consider the “unfathomable” evil done by “mighty men.” God’s power remains God’s power. Who can say to God that God has not done rightly (Gen. R. 36:2)? It’s hard to say.

The rabbis claim that Noah entered the ark in peace and left the ark in peace (Gen. R. 36:2), but not for very long. The epilogue to the story as imagined by the rabbis returns us to the basic anxieties about procreation. In the Bible, after God establishes with him God’s rainbow covenant of peace and protection, Noah immediately plants a vineyard and gets drunk; according to the rabbis, all in one day. The righteousness of Moses is held up over against the righteousness of Noah, who ends up a castrate. (That’s the conjecture of the editors of the Soncino Press translation) (Gen R. 36:3). “Uncovered in his tent,” the rabbis take this to mean his wife’s tent.

What happened? In R. Eliezer’s name, R. Huna comments “When Noah was leaving the ark a lion struck him and mutilated. Now he went to cohabit, but his semen was scattered and he was humiliated (Gen. R. 36:4). But was it really a lion that did this to Noah? He woke up from his drunken stupor and “knew what his youngest had done to him.” The rabbis now blame Ham. It’s Ham who castrated his father. That’s what he “did to him.” Grieving in the ark for a young child to serve him, Noah had wanted to sire a fourth son. “But when Ham acted thus to him, he exclaimed “You have prevented me from begetting a young son to serve me.” And because Ham “prevented him from doing something in the dark,” i.e. sexual cohabitation, Noah cursed his seed. In the ark, we learn, Ham copulated with the dog, which the rabbis compare to a person who attempts to “mint his own coinage in the very palace of the king.”

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In the painting by Luini, the colors are bright red and the outlines are clear. At first, I thought Noah was looking down at himself. Then I thought maybe he’s glaring at Ham. When I blew up the image, I saw that it’s not clear he’s even conscious. Perhaps it’s the two brothers who matter more. The one brother (Yaphet?) looks at his brother Ham in disbelief. The other brother (Shem?) looks away from the entire scene, disgusted but more knowing, as if he realizes that the scene and the situation it represents are complex. As the rabbis understand it, the story of Noah is not a story of righteousness, but of human degradation. Are these image true to life? I hope not. The human person does not come out whole out of these kinds of trauma.

 

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American Post Mortem (Israel-Palestine Negotiations) (Nahum Barnea)

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Veteran political correspondent Nahum Barnea, writing for Yediot Acharanot, got the scoop from high ranking American State Department people close to the failed Israel-Palestine negotiations. This is what the official position is going to look like. The settlements constituted a major stumbling block, but I think it goes deeper. You can read the entire article here, but this to me was the highlight:

Using advanced software, the Americans drew a border outline in the West Bank that gives Israel sovereignty over some 80 percent of the settlers that live there today. The remaining 20 percent were meant to evacuate. In Jerusalem, the proposed border is based on Bill Clinton’s plan – Jewish neighborhoods to Israel, Arab neighborhoods to the Palestinians.

The Israeli government made no response to the American plan, and avoided drawing its own border outline.

The criticism against the Israeli government is presented in terms of wounds inflicted by a friend who could still be trusted: Israel is very dear to them, but the wounds are deep.

In contrast to previous rounds of negotiations in which proposals were proposed and the Palestinian side failed to offer a counter-proposal, this time it was Israel that dropped the ball.

These are self-inflicted wounds. If Israel is unwilling and unable to define its border, then the Palestinian leadership should go to international bodies and to European Union, Israel’s largest trading partner, to press their case for national independence. Or they should simply dismantle the Palestinian Authority and demand the right to vote for the Knesset. Under the current government, there is no Israeli partner for a negotiated settlement.

This to me is the end of the line. Is Israel even a nation state? A nation state should be able to define its border, which Israel seems unable to do.

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Godfather (Some People)

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Shocked and horrified! I actually know people who have never seen the Godfather. Okay, they’re young, but come on! I tried to shame them. Who “reads” anything anymore? To be sure I have a colleague who never saw Godfather 2. She’s a puritan!

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(Eco Theology) God Loves the Smell of Meat (Noah)

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“I love the smell of napalm in the morning.” No longer righteous, or not mentioned as such, Noah builds after the floodwaters subside an altar to God. YHWH smelled the pleasing odor. That’s why he won’t doom the earth again because of “man,” whose devisings, we are given to understand, are evil from youth. “So long as the earth endures/Seedtime and harvest/Cold and heat/Summer and winter/Day and night/Shall never cease” (Gen. 8:22, JPS 1985). Nietzsche was right. The justification of human existence can only be aesthetic. Not anywhere near enough attention gets paid to olfaction. In the Bible, God loves the pungent smell of burning meat and earth, and the turning of the seasons, and that’s why God won’t destroy the human creature. After the flood, it begins to eat flesh.

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VE RI TAS (The 55 Schools Under Federal Investigation for Sexual Assault)

Here Are the 55 Schools Under Federal Investigation for Sexual AssaultSEXPAND

I’ll have to say I’m surprised that Syracuse is not on the list. Heard this on NPR today and it made me sick to my stomach. I don’t understand how these cases are not turned over to the cops. Colleges and universities are just like any other closed institution based on hierarchy and reputation. The full story can be found in the New York Times.

[From Jezebel Magazine]

In an unprecedented move, today the US Department of Education released to the public a list of all of the 55 (that’s a deliberate two fives, not me accidentally hitting 5 twice) American colleges and universities that are currently under investigation for violating Title IX over their piss-poor handling of sex assault investigations. Did your school or alma mater make the list? Find out here!

Some on the list aren’t a surprise at all (HEL-LO, Occidental College! LOVELY TO SEE YOU, FLORIDA STATE!) but other inclusions and omissions are. I was surprised that my alma mater, The University of Notre Dame, wasn’t listed, because they’ve been famously shitty about handling some high profile sexual assault cases in the last decade or so. I was also shocked by how many gigantic public schools were on the list. Being terrible about rape appears as endemic to American high education as barfing on the quad.

Here’s the full list, alphabetically by state. Would-be donors (or attendees), take note:

Arizona State University
Butte-Glen Community College (CA)
Occidental College (CA)
University of California-Berkeley
University of Southern California
Regis University (CO)
University of Colorado at Boulder
University of Colorado at Denver
University of Denver
University of Connecticut
Catholic University of America (DC)
Florida State University
Emory Universtiy (GA)
University of Hawaii at Manoa
University of Idaho
Knox College (IL)
University of Chicago
Indiana University- Bloomington
Vincennes University (IN)
Amherst College (MA)
Boston University
Emerson College (MA)
Harvard College (MA)
Harvard University- Law School
University of Massachusetts-Amherst
Frostberg State University (MD)
Michigan State University
University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Guilford College (NC)
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Minot State University (ND)
Dartmouth College (NH)
Princeton University (NJ)
CUNY Hunter College (NY)
Hobart and William Smith Colleges (NY)
Sarah Lawrence College (NY)
SUNY Binghamton (NY)
Denison University (OH)
Ohio State University
Wittenberg University (OH)
Oklahoma State University
Carngie Mellon University (PA)
Franklin and Marshall College (PA)
Pennsylvania State University
Swarthmore College (PA)
Temple University (PA)
Vanderbilt University (TN)
Southern Methodist University (TX)
The University of Texas-Pan American
College of William and Mary (VA)
University of Virginia
Washington State University
University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
Bethany College (WV)
West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine

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New York City Rainbow Deluge (Noah)

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Urban landscape last week over Harlem. Still thinking about Noah, I like how the color spectrum falls onto and into the city. From the ground-point, it looks like a deluge made out of light.

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Thomas Demand Hypermediation

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Put to rest that old hoary notion that photography has a special ontological relation to reality. In works by contemporary photographer Thomas Demand, that relation is marked as hypermediation. The image is at least three times removed from the original object. The artist [1] takes a photograph of an interior, [2] reconstructs that interior with or as a paper model, [3] shoots the model, which he then destroys. There’s no trace of the original. It has disappeared into the photographic image. It looks real, but it’s not. In its fourth mediation, shot by a visitor to the museum, you get reflections from the gallery space, as if it was meant to be photographed, adding a neat new and external dimension to the “original image.” In this particular image, Vault, mediation and hyper-mediation are brought to bear upon the Holocaust and its memory, which have been trans-mediated in art and into art.

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