On Contagions: Leviticus and the Fascination of the Abomination
Gerald
Majer
Villa Julie College
Contagions
ontagions describe
a communication. The nature of this communication varies: a contagion may
communicate a disease, an idea, or a feeling. Unlike communication defined as
an intentional act, contagions are distinguished by a non-volitional character;
their essence is that we cannot control them, that they may secretly infiltrate
or suddenly overwhelm us. (An exception would seem to be the case of a person
deliberately infecting another; but only an effect at least once removed, the
infection spreading to a third person, would qualify as contagion: strictly
speaking, there could be no act of contagion.) Thus contagions may be
broadly understood as registering a certain weakness or vulnerability, a
confusion or susceptibility of our thoughts and feelings, a potential
disturbance of the integrity of our bodies and our identities. Contagion, with its
trace of the Latin tangere, to touch (one might hear its catch in the
sounding of the second syllable), suggests something that exceeds simple
communication or contact—perhaps even a mortal fascination, an intimation of
what touches at the very limit of our boundaries, what marks the uncertain
proximity and distancing of a spacing, a between, somewhere inside us, outside
us, or maybe elsewhere, impossible to locate precisely because contagions mark
a shifting of locations, an unsettling of positions. (In the symphony hall, is
the fit of coughing mine, or an echo of the others who are also coughing, or a
break in the signifying-system of music and listening itself?)
- In the Western tradition, contagions have named a touching
variously considered detrimental or beneficial. Most often the negative
sense is uppermost, as in For Rabirius on a Charge of Treason,
where Cicero draws a contrast to his opponent's position in terms of
purity and pollution: "[it is] I, who forbid the assembly to be
polluted by the contagion (contagione) of an executioner, who think
that the forum of the Roman people ought to be purified from all such
traces of nefarious wickedness, who urge that the assembly ought to be
kept pure, the campus holy, the person of every Roman citizen inviolate
…"[1]
- This sort of contagion is a familiar point of application
for contemporary cultural theory, which often takes as a major focus
structures of domination and their elaboration in terms of what Mary
Douglas has called schemas of purity and danger. It is obvious here that
contagions serve ideological and cultural imperatives. Cicero deploys a
polarity of pure and impure, characterizing his opponent as one who would
allow a contagion of violence to pollute the Roman polis and so
representing himself as its righteous defender. The category of the pure
and proper gains in affective value to the extent that it is in proximity
to a dangerous contagion. The strategy has a double payoff: on one side,
the opponent's position is characterized in terms of a creeping plague, an
incipient horror that on the instant will infect the Roman people. On the
other, Cicero's position is identified with a suddenly and dramatically
precious purity, order, and holiness.
- Such moments of contagion are historically and culturally
ubiquitous, of both ancient and modern vintage, and characteristic of
non-Western as well as Western peoples. Along with the critique of
ideology, however, contagions have also been a mainstay of theory
construction in the human sciences; while demystifying the ideological
function of contagions, cultural theory itself in some respects depends on
the concept, epistemologically speaking. The importance of contagions
emerges with the development of the concept of culture and, more broadly,
social-scientific theories from the nineteenth century onward. Contagions
are a key element in the construction of such theories because contagion
as communication or transmissibility provides a sort of discursive hinging
or adhesion, an apparent stabilizing of the uneasy immanence/transcendence
of the culture concept. One example of such hinging is Emile Durkheim's Elementary
Forms of the Religious Life, where the essential mechanism of culture
is a contagion that explains, in each and every case (affects,
representations, the apriori categories of thought itself) the necessity
of all to cohere, to circulate, always to compose a whole. The force of
contagions and taboos is shown to be the power of the cultural or social
itself, evidence of an irresistible telos of integration and function like
that Durkheim sees in the crowd effervescence of festival and sacrifice.
- Contagions, however, appear in a different light when the
culture concept is exposed as essentially a metaphysical construction
driven by an epistemological insistence on the privilege of the same, and
a subsuming of otherness and difference under an ultimate controlling
power of the whole. As argued by Christopher Herbert, culture is a discursive
ghost, a crypto-theological concept that legitimizes the modern
nation-state and its programs of social and political control; Mary Poovey
makes a similar point in tracing the nineteenth-century emergence of the
discursive domain of the social body.[2] Given
this demystification of the culture concept, another strain in
contemporary theory has focused on contagions in terms of transgressions
and subversions, of how various forms of resistance arise in relation to
dominant ideologies, and how such resistances may allow a liberation of
affect or desire as opposed to a reaffirmation of a dominant order or an
articulation of power/knowledge. In such transgressive moments, contagions
indicate something other than a proximity of the pure to the impure—that
fearful instant when order and totality are reaffirmed and revalued
precisely because they are under threat. Instead, disturbances and
crossings of boundaries highlight a breaking loose of affect or desire in
an inversion or displacement of dominant cultural categories and
hierarchies. As in the moments of cultural rejuvenation described by Mary
Douglas, the practices of carnival explored by Mikhal Bakhtin, the powers
of liminality mapped by Victor Turner, or the limit-experiences of
sacrifice theorized by Georges Bataille, such moments witness a revaluing
of things conventionally designated as low or base—society's others and
outcasts, the human body, the material world, the scatological and the
erotic. Thinkers have disagreed on whether such moments are truly
subversive or are ultimately recuperated within the dominant culture (or
perhaps, unevenly, both). Be that as it may, contagions register a
potential for invasion, for overwhelming, for a defeat of what is sure and
proper. In such moments, a dangerous yet enticing proximity exerts its
fascination, unsettling the stability and surety of cultural categories
and identities.
- Responding in another way to the limitations of conventional
models of ideology and culture, some areas of contemporary theory exhibit
a distinctively anti-systemic strain. One example is cognitive
anthropology (and in the recent popular-scientific discourse of
"memetics") where contagions are reframed in evolutionary-biological
terms. Dan Sperber's thesis of an epidemiology of representations attempts
an empirical account of culture by hypothesizing a process through which
representations adhere or are "catching" for the human mind. On
a quite different basis, but with the same interest in complicating
culture/ideology models, Mary Louise Pratt's concept of the contact zone
and Homi Bhaba's descriptions of hybridity and borders suggest an anti- or
sub-systemic sort of contagion—a twisting, filtering, revision, or skewing
of affects and representations that lingers over rather than works a
transgression or a systematic return upon the crossings and roilings of
categories and boundaries.
- A similar move is characteristic of poststructuralist
theory where contagions are a means of tracking differentials that
unsettle the systematizations of ideology and culture, as well as those of
Western philosophy. Jacques Derrida's accounts of the pharmakon and the
parasite establish how philosophy's truths are a function of warding off
contagious incursions of otherness or difference; différance, as
marked by the traces of alterity which unsettle forms of systematicity, is
itself a contagion, a touching-between that disperses and disseminates
positions and substantives. In Jean-Luc Nancy's work (as well as in the
later Derrida), a like approach has been taken to sociality and ethics.
David Hume and Adam Smith long ago attempted to conceptualize the social
in terms of feeling and sentiment, postulating a contagion of sympathy in
models, which presented a supplement to classical liberal ideas of the
social contract. While such accounts tended to support utilitarian or
nascent-cultural models of the social, Nancy returns to the possibility of
understanding sociality in terms of affect and especially in terms of a
redefinition of communication, contact, and contagion. Sociality is
described as a being in common in which persons are singularities rather
than subjects of culture; the communication which marks the encounter of
singular beings is a passion of contagion which is not, however, a matter
of social or cultural organicism, totality, or communion, but of a
being-with, an exposure or susceptibility to the between.
- In a famous phrase from Joseph Conrad's story, Marlow
ponders the "darkness" of the archaic world and suggests his
unaccountable interest in it as evidence of a profound seductiveness: he
is touched by a contagious "fascination of the abomination." The
word "abomination" recalls Leviticus, where the word of Jehovah
marks those contagious pollutions, which are an abomination before the
Lord. Taboos regarding diet, bodily discharges, and particularly the
practices of worship and sacrifice all support the value of holiness by
means of a correspondent heightening of dangerous contagions, of
abominations. From the perspective of Leviticus, the fascination of the
abomination registers a horrified gaze upon transgression, upon a
breaching of taboo, which taints the offender with uncleanness, fault, or
sin. Further, perhaps, fascination names a passivity, an arrest in spite
of oneself at the sight of evil, a pausing over some momentary wavering of
the boundary between proper and improper, sacred and profane. In Heart
of Darkness Conrad complicates the meanings of abomination in
light of such a fascination, one which encompasses not only a revulsion
but also an attraction. The fascination of the abomination plays upon
moral and psychic ambivalences, implicating Marlow himself as he explores
the nature of Kurtz's transgressions. And fascinated, Marlow does not
steadily maintain Kurtz's case at a distance but is himself infected by
it. His attempts to give an accounting seem always provisional,
compromised, demonstrating not a ready mastery but rather a disturbing
uncertainty, an incipient dispossession of truth and meaning. This
fascination of the abomination might also be called a power of seduction,
in Jean Baudrillard's sense of the term.[3] Kurtz's
case becomes not a matter of determinate meaning and truth but rather a
play of signs, an absorption of meaning within a multiplicity of
appearances. Marlow is fascinated by the reversibility of true and false,
with Kurtz viewed by turns as innocent and guilty, the truth of his case
less important than its bewitching and infectious spell. In some way, it
appears that what is crucial in Heart of Darkness is not what the
final determination, the last turn of the screw, will be, but instead
everything that happens in the gaps, the breaks, not the points of arrival
or the secured positions of an interpretation but instead the betweens.
- In this essay I will argue that the fascination of the
abomination may be seen as not just a horror of what threatens order and
self-identity or of what calls forth ambivalence. Contagions intimate a between
touching the limit points of boundaries, interrupting the work of orders,
systems, and representations. As such, contagions mark an alterity that is
not resumed to system or metaphysics or even to transgression but that
differentially knots and interweaves, as in a patchwork, the same and the
other, singular persons and plural beings in common. I will consider this
sense of contagions as it emerges in the work of Mary Douglas, Paul
Ricoeur, and Jean-Luc Nancy. In her accounts of sacrifice, Douglas insists
on the systemic and integrative function of contagions. Yet in pushing her
thinking to the limits of system itself, she admits a sense of finitude
and exposure not comprehended within the intellectual-cognitive framework
of the culture-system. Ricoeur's analysis of contagions in the
construction of religious-ethical subjectivity goes further in seeing not
only a first philosophy outlined in the categories of pure and impure, but
also the registering of an infinite distance between the human and the
divine that encompasses a susceptibility to alterity, the spacing of an
infinite between. Nancy revisits the problematics of sacrifice and
finitude, delineating contagions in terms of a differance, which radically
displaces conventional understandings of subjectivity and sociality. For Nancy,
contagion, or contact, is a between which delays and disperses, a between
which makes the singularity of subjects and the plurality of sociality an
always different event; the between is the syncope of an advent, the
disposition of a surprise. The impossibility of sociality, its resistance
to descriptions in terms of integration, function, or communion, is
defined by the sharing-out and partitioning characteristic of the between,
its contagious scattering that is at the same time a gathering.
Mary Douglas and Leviticus
- Mary Douglas's analysis of Leviticus in Purity and
Danger develops a rather different emphasis than the one I have
sketched in light of Conrad's novel. The fascination of the abomination is
understood in terms of the truth of the culture-system, and especially in
terms of social-integrative imperatives of coherence and function. That
which is taboo, impure or contagious constitutes an abomination before the
Lord. In keeping with a cultural imperative, abominations keep clear and
distinct the categories of social being. Seemingly arbitrary dietary
prohibitions, for example, are explained in light of particular animals
(the swine, the camel) representing an anomaly of social classification,
and thus an abomination; that is, a potential unsettling of the
culture-system's rationality, a raising of the disturbing specter of chaos
and indifferentiation—precisely what the culture-system works to exclude.[4]
- In Douglas's account even those taboos which don't make
sense still do, insofar as they mark the power of social boundaries and
classifications. At the same time, her analysis indicates a simple
resolution of the old conundrum of the tabooed and contagious nature of
both sacred and unclean by suggesting the two opposed realms are
coterminous. The unclean edges the sacred, the sacred the unclean, because
fundamentally it is their difference that drives the engine of collective
structures and representations. Coursing with an imperative of the
culture-system for securing itself as self-identical, unified, the Same,
contagious abominations act like an electrically charged barbed wire that
articulates and maintains the stability of social space.
- Douglas's approach has been questioned in light of its
logicalistic tendency, that is, its emphasis upon social construction and
classification in terms of a cognitive-intellectual schema. In this regard,
it is significant that matters of anomaly and classification dominate
Douglas's discussion of Leviticus, while an equally if not more important
topic for cultural anthropology and questions of purity and danger—namely,
the matter of sacrifice—is not addressed. Sacrifice is important to a
consideration of purity and danger because sacrifice is often a key moment
when taboos are deliberately transgressed, exposing the dynamics as well
as the statics of the culture-system. Douglas does take account of sacrifice
and transgression elsewhere. In the conclusion of her argument,
transgression and sacrifice are central to the description of a different
phase than the constructive-conservative one she sees in Leviticus. In
this latter phase, the culture-system suffers a transgression of its laws
of pollution in accordance with what she calls a mechanism of the system
renewing itself. The sacrifice and consumption of a tabooed, anomalous
animal in one respect would seem to contradict the anxiety for order and
integration Douglas posits as characteristic of the culture-system. Yet,
following a line of analysis that goes back to Robertson Smith and
Durkheim, Douglas sees in such sacrificial transgression a necessary
cultural dynamic. Being excluded, the anomaly, the dirt of the system,
ultimately becomes formless because it is outside the system of
representations and categories. As such, it accrues a kind of reserve, a
disposable power, a mana. In sacrificial transgression, this
generalized power of the collective is localized or framed, and thus made
available for reinvestment in the economy of the whole. Sacrificial
transgression serves a renewal or a composting function.
- All of this confirms that for Douglas sacrificial
transgression is ultimately a matter of integration and function, of the
culture-system's imperative for maintaining itself. Considering further
the meaning of sacrifice and transgression, however, Douglas notes that in
sacrifice the urge to overcome the oppositions of pure and impure leads to
specifically religious themes (italics in original).[5] In the
case of Lele ritual sacrifice, for example, the seemingly unaccountable
breaking of the taboo that wards off anomaly is in one respect
social-integrative, functioning to renew or recharge the culture-system,
and perhaps at the same time functioning to afford a timely release of
systemic strain. Yet such functions are not all: for Douglas, a distinctly
religious aspect of sacrifice emerges in a moment of reflexivity—a point
at which the humanly constructed nature of social classifications and laws
is exposed and at which the givens of the culture-system are thought at
another level.[6] This
perspective may be viewed as one of fascination inasmuch as it highlights
the system itself as a play of signs, as a reversible pattern rather than
a stable structure, as seduction rather than truth.
- The Lele initiates, on one hand, recall Leviticus in terms
of the sacrifice's social-integrative function, in the ritual rehearsing
basic cultural categories just as the ancient Israelites did.[7] The religious
meaning of the ritual emerges in particular with the sacrificial victim
(the pagolin), reminiscent of Abraham's ram and the Christ; as the pure
and the impure are framed in terms of a single figure, the ritual unifies
opposites and in so doing precipitates a power which reinvigorates the
order and integration of the culture-system. On the other hand, however,
the religious element highlights the passivity of the sacrificial animal,
which voluntarily suffers its death.[8] In this
regard, the social-integrative function is perhaps not so clear. The
deliberate abomination of the sacrificial ritual opens the possibility of
a fascination in which the system's limits are exposed and the sacrificial
ritual is revealed as a play of appearances, a pure movement of
metamorphosis of the kind Sartre shuddered over when contemplating the
experience of the in-itself as opposed to the for-itself: "I sense it
like a dizziness; it draws me to it as the bottom of a precipice might
draw me."[9]
- Designating a specifically religious factor, Douglas is
marking a limit to the social-integrative function of ritual and hinting
at a way of knowing that is not primarily a matter of
intellectual-cognitive social classifications. The sacrificial victim is
not only an element of cultural logic but also a figure of pity and
terror. In its suffering, it is a phenomenon of finitude—in one instant,
at least, there is a touching upon a limit, upon what the culture-system
does not completely encompass: sacrifice reflexively registers the
potential failure of human order and systematicity at the very height of
their ostensible powers of making whole. In the fascination of the
abomination, sacrificial transgression opens to the affective, the
non-representational, the non-systemic—perhaps something like the
in-itself, to recall Sartre's formulation, which is not comprehended by
the project of mastery of the for-itself. Like the dispossession of the
sacrificial victim, this is a knowledge that is dispossessed.
- Douglas notes that the Lele speak of the ritual as an
entering into "the house of the afflicted," and she hears in the
phrase a Biblical resonance, one of tragedy and suffering and exile. In
sacrifice, the clear and distinct lineaments of the culture-system become
muddled, become a mystery passing comprehension. Even as sacrificial
transgression functions to support the social-integrative imperative of
the culture-system, it registers a certain limit of the totality. The
fascination of the abomination, then, may lead beyond the representational
logics of social being, may forego the imperative of the same and move
toward a different sort of fascination—that of the Other, or alterity.
Sacrifice attests to a demand other than that of a cultural systematics.
Paul Ricoeur and the Infinite Demand
- The term "abomination" denotes an impurity, a
contagion. Yet its etymology indicates something more—ab, from, ominari,
an omen or foreshadowing. It is not simply an omen, but an omen that comes
from another place, from some distance; it is not immediately present.
Abomination intimates an Other whose word demands the system of ritual,
but who is also elsewhere, transcendent. Ricoeur follows this meaning
insofar as in his tracing of the ethical meanings of contagion and
defilement he describes both a drawing-near and a separation from this
Other.
- In Paul Ricoeur's reading of the Old Testament, the
fascination of the abomination first represents a primordial experience of
defilement, of contamination or stain, and a concomitant expectation of
retribution. Thus the fascination of the abomination evidences a
primordial reverence for order. The abomination of contagious defilement
encompasses a fear of punishment which is "the negative
envelope" of a yet more basic admiration for order.[10]
- Such a veneration of order is congruent with Mary Douglas's
social-integrative account of purity and danger: the fascination of the
abomination ultimately testifies to an anxiety and demand for structure,
stability, the reassurance of the same. In this view, the abominations of
Leviticus would be, as for Douglas, a system of retributive legalism whose
primary function is to establish and support the social whole in terms of
its purity and its holiness: "You shall not defile yourselves.… For I
am the Lord who brought you up out of the land of Egypt, to be your God;
you shall therefore be holy, for I am holy" (11:44-5); "Thus you
shall keep the people of Israel separate from their uncleanness, lest they
die …" (15:31).
- Yet there is another factor in the experience of the
abomination. The negative envelope of defilement, contagion, and dread
outlines an ethical relation, an intimation of what exceeds the system of
laws and prohibitions regarding the pure and the impure while yet
remaining in relation to it. Falling ill and doing ill come to be linked;
contagious defilement forms the basis for ethics insofar as ethics
responds to the demand of an Other before whom one stands accused. Thus,
Ricoeur argues, the sense of evil becomes "the revelation in an
infinite measure of the demand that God addresses to man. It is this
infinite demand that creates an unfathomable distance and distress between
God and man."[11]
- Ricoeur sees the Old Testament Covenant in relation to the
negative envelope of contagious defilement that borders the holy, but not
only in terms of an order which affirms itself by negation.[12] When
the punishment of defilement becomes no longer a matter of taboo and
vengeance but a matter of ethics and sin, it is possible for the idea of
retribution to exceed itself, as it becomes a demand or imperative beyond
any economic or retributive explanation.[13] Yet
this ethical demand is heard in the Covenant not by a superseding of the
ritualism of contagious defilement but by virtue of that same experience
of defilement and retribution.
- The Covenant is defined by an infinite demand. This demand
emerges in prophetism, where the destruction visited upon a sinful Israel
is not a simple vengeance, but God's word spoken in indignation and
accusation. This word defines God and Israel in terms of a dialogical
relation, a personal bond, a speaking. Prophetism, however, does not
simply present a situation of the ethical superseding the ritual law: the
infinite demand works through the ancient codes; hence there is a tension
between the infinite demand and God's commandments, and a concomitant
"dialectic of unlimited indignation and detailed prescription."[14]
- This tension between the infinite demand and the finite
law defines the consciousness of sin. One is not just guilty in general
before God; one is specifically and personally guilty of breaking God's
law. Injustice isn't only a matter of a generalized problem, but something
for which one is personally responsible. This dialectic of infinite demand
and finite law is also necessary because a God of the infinite demand
alone would withdraw from the dialogical relation and become Wholly Other;
similarly, the finite law without the infinite demand would become purely
a matter of individual moral conscience, of autonomy.[15]
Ricoeur also links this dialectic to a heteronomy of Jewish ethics in
which a recognition of the infinite demand occurs precisely through an
emphasis on the finite law, which emphasizes that the subject is not the
source of the law, nor is the law transparent to a moral consciousness,
but that obeying the law makes manifest the will of God.[16]
- While the fascination of the abomination would seem to
indicate a demand for order and purity, fascination then might also be
understood in terms of a radical exposure, characteristic of what Ricoeur
calls "the initial situation of man as God's prey."[1] In
this perspective, the fascination of the abomination would not be a
hypnotized or mystical experience of paralyzed fear or mythic
participation, but rather an aspect of a dialogical relation, an opening
of a discourse between God and man. The dreadful contagion of the
abomination which clings to one's body, one's hands, one's heart, also is
a fascination with that Other who stands away but at the same time stands
in proximity to one in terms of discourse, the word, the finite law.
"Thus [the] initial situation, which plunges into the darkness of the
power and violence of the Spirit, also emerges in the light of the Word."[1] The
archaic structures of contagion and defilement engage a
"hypersubjective reference"[19] in which
sin marks the violation of a personal bond, a tainting or staining within
the dialogical relation to God. The fundamental experience of contagious
defilement attends an ethical distancing of humanity and God, a distancing
that ultimately maintains not a surety for cultural integration, for the
dominance of the Same, but a relation to God as Other.
- This distancing involves dialogical and affective rather
than logical and representational structures. It does not manage
integration, but rather a wandering and an anguish before the infinite
demand. Speaking God's indignation regarding Israel's sins, the prophets
locate the dirt, the defilement, the contagious abomination, in the heart
of man, but at the same time turn away from self-salvation to a more demanding
call to the "neighbor, with whom [one] is never finished, contrary to
the demand of the ritual codes."[20] Thus,
Ricoeur says, "the demand is unlimited with respect to its transcendent
origin, with respect to its existential root, with respect to others, with
respect to those lowly ones in whom the appeal for 'righteousness and
justice' is incarnated. Such is the ethical distance that indignation
creates in the very heart of the covenant."[21]
- The fascination of the abomination secures the
culture-system's order and hegemony in terms of pure and impure, sacred
and profane. Yet this fascination also turns away from such security and
self-grounding, and toward what refuses or exceeds integration and
totality. The meaning of the wrath and indignation of God is an element
neglected by a reading of Leviticus that views it primarily in terms of a
ritual system of purity that establishes the wholeness and holiness of the
culture-system. We can read the wrath of God as it is expressed in
relation to the "unholy fire" offered in sacrifice by Aaron's
sons in a different light than that of the culture-system's policing of
the boundaries of pure and impure.
Now Nadab and Abi'hu, the sons
of Aaron, each took his censer, and put fire in it, and laid incense on it, and
offered unholy fire before the Lord, such as he had not commanded them. And
fire came forth from the presence of the Lord and devoured them, and they died
before the Lord. Then Moses said to Aaron, "This is what the Lord has
said, 'I will show myself holy among those who are near me, and before all the
people I will be glorified.'" And Aaron held his peace. (10:1-3)
- It might be said that this passage evidences a classic
situation of taboo and punishment, of defilement being instantly punished
by a near-automatic action. In terms familiar from Douglas (or Durkheim),
it would appear that the punishing Lord is he who maintains a strict watch
over the boundaries of the holy and the unclean. This Lord is in essence
the social whole itself, his power the force of the collective, his action
a reflex of the culture-system's imperative for order and totality. Yet we
might instead see in God's wrath and indignation against Aaron's sons the
ethical distance of separation. Those whom a god of the tribe would
perhaps favor and forgive are precisely those who here are most severely
punished; in the midst of the chosen people, God's wrath is unleashed,
marking a separation in proximity. The words Moses speaks from God
emphasize this separation: God will show himself holy among those who are near,
but this proximity is not one liable to a contact or a participation but
instead is a proximity in which God is always elsewhere. The finite law of
taboo and abomination is not just a matter of ritual impurity and
punishment but of the infinite demand of God as Other.
- Ricoeur describes the wrath of God as indicating a
religious traumatism, an experience of "aggression against the
security of man."[22] The
wrath of God does not, however, merely testify to archaic powers and
structures of purity and danger such as those that inform the book of
Leviticus. The traumatism of dread and terror before God defines further
the meaning of the Covenant. The wrath of God distances God from the
history of Israel even as God remains in proximity;[23]
ultimately this relation is what keeps the Jewish law from ever becoming
merely a ritual system or a purely cultural logic of sin and punishment.
- The fascination of the abomination exposes a between of man
and God. Contagious defilement, in marking the finite laws of purity and
danger, invokes at the same time a dialogical relation, and thus breaks
the social totality of myth and participation. Defilement and contagion do
not just mark the internal boundaries of a homeostatic social structure,
allowing the culture-system to function and cohere as one and the Same.
Nor does contagion, as a force of communication, only evidence the power
of the collective over its system of ideas, categories, and classifications.
Contagion edges, rather, the weight or the height of the Other. Contagion
intimates the between of the one and the other. This between does
not entail a contact or a communication but rather holds these in
suspense, maintaining a separation, a distance, which baffles communion or
totality. The fascination of the abomination is the seduction, the
dispossession of man by God.
- Sacrifice is abomination because it breaks the ritual law,
makes an exception, allows the use of what is otherwise tabooed. In Leviticus
blood is first of all an abomination as a form of unclean, contagious
discharge, as in the strictures on menstrual blood. Yet the blood of
sacrificial animals, too, is tabooed because it is sacred, reserved to the
Lord:
If any man of the house of Israel
… eats any blood, I will set my face against that person … and will cut him off
from among his people. For the life of the flesh is in the blood; and I have
given it for you upon the altar to make atonement for your souls; for it is the
blood that makes atonement, by reason of the life (17:10-11).
- In a cultural logic of purity and danger, the unclean and
sacred character of blood indicates it as a theme in the elaboration of
the social structure. As unclean, blood supports the drawing of specific
social boundaries and classifications; as sacred, blood supports a ritual
by means of which the culture-system renews itself, transposing what is
normally unclean into the framework of the sacred and managing a
reinvestment or renewal of the social totality. Hence the blood that is
tabooed is the vital substance of sacrificial ritual. The blood of the
sacrificial animals is holy, and Aaron now is instructed to sprinkle it
upon the mercy seat and upon the horns of the altar.
Then he shall go out to the
altar which is before the Lord and make atonement for it, and shall take some
of the blood … and put it on the horns of the altar round about. And he shall
sprinkle some of the blood upon it with his finger seven times, and cleanse it
and hallow it from the uncleannesses of the people of Israel. (16:18-9).
- Ricoeur, however, reads the blood-offering from another
perspective, one which perhaps joins Douglas's sense of the sorrowful
mysteries of sacrifice, of an entering into affliction, which further
intimates an experience of exposure and finitude. In the symbolism of
blood it is possible to see not just an expiation, that is, a sacrificial
return directed to the power of God, but a gift. This gift is in keeping
with the dialogical relation of God and man. Hence the blood is not a
substitution which represents, in the sacrifice, the soul of the
transgressor, Israel. Nor does the blood, as in the cultural logics
described by Robertson Smith or Durkheim, represent the shared life of the
community or the collective. Instead, the gift is something God has given
to man, insofar as in the dialogical relation, God has given instruction.
The gift is a form of the word, of speaking, between God and man. Again,
the finite law of sacrifice marks an infinite demand that overflows it
because the sacrifice is not only ritual function but also discourse,
language.
- The scapegoat ritual that follows emphasizes this ethical
and dialogical meaning of the sacrifice. The animal is not merely a
scapegoat who restores the purity of the social whole by having Israel's
transgressions laid upon its head, thus serving a cultural symbolism and
making for rejuvenation of the culture-system. The scapegoat is the focus
and the occasion of a confession to God of Israel's transgressions, a
dialogical figure of sorrow and atonement. Like the blood-gift, the
scapegoat is a way of speaking, between God and man. The fascination of
the abomination would then be one way of describing a relation that, in
Emmanuel Levinas's terms, "suspends participation and object-cognition."
Such a relation is one in which one does not draw one's existence from the
Other but hears the word of the Other and is "in relation with a
substance overflowing its own idea in me."[24] Like
Ricoeur's infinite demand, this overflowing which Levinas names
"Infinity" marks a distance, separation, and suspense in which
the relation to the Other will not be integrated, will not serve
self-possession, identity, or the security of the Same. In the finite law
of the ritual, the fascination of the abomination evidences the trace of
the Other in terms of a between and not a communion or a
conjuncture; it registers the trauma and the welcome, the contagious
fascination of him who faces.
Jean-Luc Nancy and the Fascination of Sacrifice
- What is blood but an abomination, insofar as blood outside
of the body-envelope is matter out of place, a discharge across the body's
boundaries that marks a rupture of the body's integrity and self-identity?
The horror of blood, according to one strain of contemporary psychology,
is a disgust-response, typically excited by phenomena that exhibit a loss
of bodily integrity and that lead in turn to the magical thinking of
contagion which imagines the dangers of a substance which potentially will
spread and infect and injure.[25] In
view of this power of contagious communication, it is said, one wants to
clean up and cover over, to regulate and impose order.
- Social-integrative theories of sacrifice see blood as a
substance of functional transgression, a substance whose flow through the
integral system of the human body is seconded by the flow of the blood of
sacrifice, which is ultimately a flow of collective force through a ritual
which reaffirms the integrity of the cultural order, the social body. But
perhaps, as in Ricoeur, the sacrificial blood, abominable and contagious,
also marks a vulnerability and exposure to what is Other. Georges Bataille
similarly holds that in sacrificial transgression the human reaches a
point where mastery ceases. This cessation of mastery is not a moment of
contact with the transcendence of a deity, nor of participation in a
society's projection of its own power and unity, nor is it only some
existential abjection of the self. It is instead an exposure to a limit of
the subject of being and of the being of the social; where mastery ceases,
one is exposed to the Other, to alterity. Thus sacrifice may be understood
in terms of what is intimated in the fascination of the abomination—as in
Ricoeur, an overflowing of the finite ritual which attests to an infinite
demand beyond any functional explanation; or, as in Bataille, an absolute
negativity where mastery ceases.
- Jean-Luc Nancy has suggested, however, that the
fascination of the abomination, which exercised Bataille's thought, gives
rise to some difficulties with the concept of sacrifice. In the Western
tradition, Nancy argues, sacrifice has been constructed as a mimetic
rupture, that is, as a break with archaic practices and as a
spiritualization of their form, and as such has tended to occlude the
meanings of existence and finitude in favor of a dialectical-idealization.
Sacrifice has become a model of dialectical sublation, of an infinite
movement that takes up the finite moment of archaic sacrifice in
trans-appropriation—Nancy's term encompasses the transitive, the
transgressive, and the economic-dialectical character of this
construction. While the mimetic rupture would seem to leave behind archaic
sacrifice, at the same time a fascination with the violence of sacrificial
cruelty persists.[26] This
fascination of the abomination is the secret at the heart of the
dialectic: the intellectual-cognitive structure is traversed by a cruel
passion—or is itself founded on such passion, betraying the
Western-cultural project of truth and mastery as it is correlated with
violence and cruelty.[27]
- Thus for Nancy, it is questionable whether the model of
mimetic rupture provides an accurate account of sacrifice. The fascination
of the abomination, of blood and cruelty, seems to persist even as
sacrifice becomes a theological and philosophical structure purified of
archaic affect. And the term mimesis is yet more problematic,
variously encompassing identification and participation and contagion, all
of which seem resistant to adequate explanation. Nancy asks, then, whether
the notion of mimetic rupture does not leave us with a mystified view of
sacrifice, whether the dialectic liberates us from cruelty or only carries
it forward in another form.[28]
- Bataille points to one answer to this question in his
explorations of sacrifice and dialectic, demonstrating, in Nancy's view,
that the dialectic cannot comprehend what is at stake in mimesis and
sacrifice.[29] Yet
the problem for Bataille is how to think this truth without becoming
fascinated once again by the dialectic and the movement of
transappropriation. Thinking beyond sacrifice would mean leaving behind
the model of a subjectivity that masters negativity, endures even its own
death, and so returns to itself its sovereignty.[30]
Sacrifice intimates the obscure realm from which repetition and mimesis
emerge and hence fascinates, is uncanny; in the fascination of the
abomination, sacrifice seems to offer us access to the other. Yet this
other is enmeshed yet again in mastery, in appropriation, as the finite is
infinitely transcended and appropriated once more. The trouble is
ultimately in our understanding of finitude, which is indeed based upon
grasping and comprehending, upon substantialization and propriation, upon
a cruelty that would take by force. Finitude is not comprehended by models
of process or economy; nor does finitude gather its meaning again through
an explosion or shattering of itself. This is to say that finitude is not
a possession or a substance, is not a "blood" which can be
hoarded for its function, or poured out for the exercise of a power, or
even made to burst the integral in the glory of an expenditure without
reserve. In Nancy's view, finitude is not a function of the sacrificial;
instead, it is simply the exposure or abandon of existence, its offering
not to the economic and substantivizing logics of sacrifice and the
dialectic but to the world—indeed, itself as world.[31]
- A finitude offered to the world—in one respect, Nancy
insists on the opening, or distance, Ricoeur formulates in terms of an
absolute but formless demand spoken between God and man in the finite
ritual. But for Nancy there is no outside of finitude; man is not
fundamentally God's prey, called to a dialogical relation characterized by
an unfathomable distance and distress. For Nancy, in the offering of
finitude (the Christological image is tempting here but would only
represent one more dialectical idealization performed by the notion of the
mimetic rupture), there is nothing but a clarity, a clarity without a God.
This clarity is one which experiences differently the fascination of the
abomination: fascination gives way to an opening and an exposure; an
opening, however, precisely upon nothing. This is not the nothing
of the abyss, but a nothing which only exposes, returns existence to
itself—not by way of an intransitivity of the dialectic, the sacrificial,
or Being, but as a differential transitivity: each time, a different time;
every one, another one. This nothing is a desubjectification, which
obviates the drive toward trans-appropriation. Existence does not have
reference to the violence of a movement that would always extract something
more from it, the blood of sacrifice, the sublation of the dialectic.
Existence is unsacrificeable.[32]
- This nothing of finitude is a refusal of totality, of
integration, of the systemic and the Same. For Nancy, it also involves a
suspicion of "the Other" insofar as alterity seems to provoke
reappropriation, to become yet another property or substance for mastery.
Refusing transappropriation, Nancy in one respect joins Ricoeur's account
of the infinite distance of the Other as indeed speaking an absolute yet
formless demand, as overflowing in terms of an infinite absence, a
"nothing."[33] And
for Nancy transcendence remains a possibility, despite an immanence that
offers only its own closure, its movement, its dispersal and differance.
Sacrifice in these terms would mark only a horizon and not a substance,
not a coagulation. This horizon is that of the between: the between
distances and disperses existence from itself; the between is the spacing
of birth and death, of the one and the other. The subject does not move
into the between—the spacing of mimesis, methexis, or contagions—not
because the between is a realm of obscurity or mystery or the abyss, but
because the between is simply the limit of each finite existence.
Existence is alone, not systematized, not dialecticized, because it always
already breaks away from itself.[34]
- Such a between might be compared to Ricoeur's unfathomable
distancing between man and God. But in the between existence itself is
distanced, infinitely distanced, from itself. For Nancy the
unsacrificeable ultimately is not an unfathomable distance but the
always-already distancing and spacing of finitude. Existence cannot be
sacrificed because it is nothing, it is the distancing and separation of
the between, of alterity.[35] What
sublation could never know in sacrifice, what gives a meaning to the
infinite absence of appropriation that is finitude and existence: between.
- The between returns us to the fascination of the
abomination, inasmuch as the between is the relation or
non-relation of contagion. Contagion fascinates with its promise of
communication and communion, of touching and contact. Contagion
ab-ominates what is distanced, held back, separate from, that same
communication and communion, what is other. While social-integrative
theories would resume the other to the systematicity of function and while
Ricoeur would maintain its infinite distance as vital to the dialogical
relation of man and God, Nancy intimates the other as that nothing, as the
between of contagion which does not coagulate into a substance or
totality.
- As promised in a note early on in his essay, Nancy
includes a further discussion of the meaning of contagion. Here the issue
of contagion appears in the context of defining mimesis. Mimesis is
problematic in meaning, denoting imitation but notoriously unclear when it
comes to how imitation works. Freud proposes a process of identification;
Levy-Bruhl proposes an experience of participation; in Nancy's view, neither
develops a satisfying account. A reconsideration of archaic sacrifice,
however, offers some clue. In the classic descriptions of Robertson Smith
and Durkheim, sacrifice works according to a social-integrative model of
communion. In this communion, contagion is the key dynamic because
contagion makes possible a general communication of affect, which in turn
secures the social totality. Contagion here marks a between which is
ultimately intransitive, resumptive. Frenzy, effervescence, the
fascination of the abomination in the ritual—all represent a between of
contagion that serves a linking of the all in a one greater than the sum
of its parts.
- Nancy proposes another kind of contagion, one in which the
between is transitive and is not resumed; this he names a
"non-communal communication" characteristic not of communion but
of being in common. Through a long history of the fascination of the
abomination, Western religion has feared this contagion, shunning it not
only because of its impurity in cultural-systemic terms but because such
contagion adumbrates an "incommunion" which is impossible to
appropriate to the economies and systems of ontotheology.
- The incommunion of contagions characterizes the between.
It traces an exposure and an offering of each singularity to the other and
to the plurality of other singularities. This incommunion characterizes a
being that is not a totality of the social body or the culture-system but
rather a differential threading of the singular and plural, of an uncommon
being in common (or, in Alphonso Lingis's phrase, a community of those who
have nothing in common [italics mine]). Contagions, then, measure
the distance and separation of the other, of alterity, not in terms of an
outside, but in terms of a step not taken, a step not beyond, an
"enigmatic contact," in Blanchot's phrase, which is a (not)
touching upon an Unknown. Finitude and its exposure and offering are not
taken up by a totality; their transcendence is in the horizon of a between
that separates and distances.
- In Nancy's model, fascination gives way to a clarity that
is not one of a social-integrative function or even a negative theology
but rather a clarity of the differential, of differance. The abomination
need not irresistibly fascinate with the prospect of an infinite
appropriation. As in the hypersubjective reference of Ricoeur, but with a
difference, the between of contagion marks the touch, the call of the
neighbor with whom one is never finished. The abomination is only a sign
of the other, the others.
- The perspective on contagions and the between developed by
Nancy might be compared to Deleuze and Guattari, who declare, following a
parallel line of thought: "To filiation we oppose contagion."[36] The
molecular operates through a transverse communicativity, moving through
what Deleuze and Guattari name the "in-between." The in-between
opens lines of flight, deterritorializations that unravel the hierarchical
orders and regulatory schemas of molar systems and economies. The
in-between affords a possibility of imagining sociality in a different way
than proposed by social-contract theory and by functional-structuralist
models such as Douglas's. The contagious communication that occurs with
the in-between shows the human as fundamentally exposed to world, as
indeed exposing world as world. One is in a certain sense always at
the beginning of the world; one is like the grass because one has given over
all that stops us from "slipping between things and growing in the
midst of things."[37]
Giving over the dreams of filiation, of synchrony and the intransitive,
one is transfixed, among, exposed to, the contagions of the others.
Sociality means that one grows as a singularity traced by the alterity of
that plural in-between, scattered and gathered, each time, another time,
not a stop.
- Contagions indicate more than an ideological resource for
segregating the pure and impure in their various guises, significant as
this function is to understanding power and the forms of cultural
hegemony. Contagions, the between—from a cultural-systemic view, a matter
of function and integration and the control of difference; contagions, the
between—in view of an analysis of finitude and infinitude, an unworking
and a disintegration. One that, however, may at the same time be said to
create the world, inasmuch as world may be defined, to recall Nancy, by
coappearing, coexisting: the contact or contagion of the one and the
other, their anachronic proximity and dispersion, their touching not a
touching together but a glide and a drift, sociality a common incommunion.
Notes
1.
Cicero, Rab. Perd. 11. Back
2.
Christopher Herbert, Culture and Anomie (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1991); Mary Poovey, Making a Social Body:
British Cultural Formation 1830-1864 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1995). Back
3.
Jean Baudrillard, Seduction, trans. Brian Singer (New York:
Palgrave, 1990). Back
4.
Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger: An Analysis of the Concepts of
Pollution and Taboo (London: Verso, 1972). Back
5.
Douglas, Purity and Danger, 169. Back
6.
Douglas, Purity and Danger, 170. Back
7.
Douglas, Purity and Danger, 170. Back
8.
Douglas, Purity and Danger, 169. Back
9.
Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and Nothingness, trans. Hazel E.
Barnes (New York: Random House, 1956), 609. Back
10. Paul
Ricoeur, The Symbolism of Evil, trans. Emerson Buchanan (Boston: Beacon
Press, 1969), 43. Back
11. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 55. Back
12. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 43. Back
13. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 42. Back
14. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 56. Back
15. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 62. Back
16. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 135. Back
17. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 51. Back
18. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 52. Back
19. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 83. Back
20. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 56. Back
21. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 56. Back
22. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 66. Back
23. Ricoeur, The
Symbolism of Evil, 67. Back
24. Emmanuel
Levinas, Totality and Infinity: An Essay on Exteriority, trans. Alphonso
Lingis (Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1969), 77. Back
25. See, e.g.,
Paul Rozin, Michele Ashmore, Carol Nemeroff, "Magical Contagion Beliefs
and Fear of AIDS," Journal of Applied Social Psychology 22, 14,
(1992), 1081-92. Back
26. Jean-Luc
Nancy, "The Unsacrificeable," trans. Richard Livingston, Yale
French Studies 79(1991):25. Back
27. Nancy,
"The Unsacrificeable," 25. Back
28. Nancy,
"The Unsacrificeable," 27. Back
29. Nancy,
"The Unsacrificeable," 27. Back
30. Nancy,
"The Unsacrificeable," 35. Back
31. Nancy,
"The Unsacrificeable," 36. Back
32. Nancy,
"The Unsacrificeable," 37. Back
33. Nancy, "The
Unsacrificeable," 37. Back
34. Nancy, "The
Unsacrificeable," 37. Back
35. Nancy, "The
Unsacrificeable," 38. Back
36. Gilles
Deleuze and Felix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, trans. Brian Massumi
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1987), 293. Back
37. Deleuze and
Guatarri, 280. Back