Affiliation:
1. Post-doc Research Assistant, Theologische Fakultät, Universität Göttingen https://dx.doi.org/88753 Göttingen Germany
Abstract
Abstract
The sacrificial story in Genesis 22:1–19, the Aqeda or “Binding of Isaac,” has generated a large body of research literature. This is due to its irresolvable ambiguity: God commands the sacrifice of Isaac and stops it. The reader is not informed about reasons or intentions of the characters involved. After analyzing some possible approaches to the text’s ambiguity, I offer a new performative reading of the passage with Giorgio Agamben’s and Judith Butler’s theories of gesture. I argue that this approach effectively deals with ambiguity, because it neither erases violence nor justifies it. It rather exposes violence by interrupting and redirecting it. Abraham’s raised hand with the knife thus becomes an interrupted gesture. It makes the text a monument to violence that teaches to see the same situation in a different light and to interrupt the continuous repetition of violent behaviour.
Subject
Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Religious studies
Reference44 articles.
1. Karman: A Brief Treatise on Action, Guilt, and Gesture;Agamben, Giorgio
2. Without Feathers;Allen, Woody
3. The Binding of Isaac: An Inner-Biblical Polemic on the Question of “Disobeying” a Manifestly Illegal Order;Boehm, Omri
4. Die Aufhebung des Menschenopfers in der Isaak- und Iphigenieerzählung;Brumlik, Micha
5. When Gesture Becomes Event;Butler, Judith