Dr. Jim, Live and in Exile in Edmonton!

I was going to post this in my more serious Biblical blog “Dr. Jim’s Thinking Shoppe and Somewhat Quirky Biblical Blog” but force of habit led to it showing up here first. So it is now in both places.

I will be away from windy Lethbridge all next week attending the following Academic Extravaganza

Concept of Exile in Ancient Israel & its Contexts

A Workshop

Ludwig-Maximilians Universität, Munich & University of Alberta, Edmonton

April 7-11, 2008 at the University of Alberta

This workshop brings together scholars from the Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich (LMU) and the University of Alberta, along with colleagues from other European and Canadian universities. This workshop is part of a newly founded cooperation between LMU and the UofA and is conceived as the first of two workshops. The second is planned for Munich (2009).

The workshop is meant to explore, from multiple perspectives, the concept of “Exile” in ancient Israel, mainly but exclusively in prophetic literature, including the social and historical setting against which it evolved and in a way that is informed by comparative ancient materials.

On Exile

Physical destruction and ideological construction, history and memory, nightmares about the past, didactic knowledge and dreams of a utopian future, basic points of reference for self-identity and for self-narratives; all the above directly relate to the topic of the workshop as they are all involved in the concept of Exile.

A Babylonian campaign against Judah in 587 BCE led to a political and social disaster for many in Judah, and for most of Judah. The monarchy collapsed, Jerusalem was destroyed, along with its temple, and many areas suffered from a drastic drop in settlement. Some of local elite were exiled to Babylon and a concept of Exile began to develop.

In ancient Israelite literature (both prophetic and historiographic) Exile is construed as a central turning point within the course of the history of Israel. In these texts “the Exile” is a central ideological concept in itself and because of the ways in which it is connected to, and connects other fundamental ideological concepts. It serves to explain the destruction of the monarchic polities and the social and economic disasters associated with them in terms of YHWH’s punishment for Israel’s/Judah’s abandonment of YHWH’s ways. As it develops an image of an unjust Israel, it creates one of a just deity. But YHWH is not only imagined as just, but also as loving and forgiving, for the exile is presented as a transitory state: Exile is deeply intertwined with its discursive counterpart, the certain “Return.” Promises and announcement of the latter are often intertwined with those of Exile. As the latter comes to be understood as a necessary purification or preparation for a renewal of YHWH’s proper relationship with Israel, the seemingly unpleasant Exilic conditions begin, discursively, to shape an image of YHWH as loving Israel and teaching it. Exile is dystopia, but one that carries in itself all the seeds of utopia. As the latter is by definition unrealized (and unrealizable), it is no wonder that the concept of Exile continued to exercise an important influence in the discourses of Israel in the Second Temple period, and was eventually influential in the production of eschatological visions.

Exile becomes also a central turning point in the HB, and a theme in the basic metanarratives of Israel, in its construction of the past, and in the construction of collective memory and remembrance. Because of spatial discontinuity with the land, narratives of exile and return become archetypal for constructions of patriarchal narratives and Egyptian sojourn and slavery that led to the Exodus. As such, the concept of Exile links to concepts such as “Israel outside the land” and “Israel inside the land;” and, in turn, leads to images such as “the empty land” during the Babylonian period.

My paper is entitled “Myth of the Exilic Return: Myth Theory and the Exile as an Eternal Reality in the Prophets” and at present I’m not quite sure what it is about. Something about Chinese archetypal biographies and the failure of Jiang Quing (Mao Zedong’s widow) to successfully rehabilitate the mythic biographies of some ambitious and powerful women from China’s imperial past. Don’t ask how I got onto that, but I found a neat paper on the subject of “Archetypes of the Self” that dealt with it and the lack of a clear distinction in China between the persistent notion of a dichotomy between “mythic” and “historical” consciousnesses in Religious Studies. It is especially present in Biblical studies. So I want to look at the prophets as “mythic” characters, built on the archetype of Moses who then provide archetypes for the 2nd temple era scribes who put the prophetic corpus together. I’m going to argue that in doing so they also employed “cosmic” myths of creation and divine combat in new ways to articulate the historical experience of deportation and repatriation to Jerusalem as mythic events in their own rights. The biblical archetype of explusion (from the Garden of Eden, the ‘exile’ of the northern state of Israel) is one of no return: eternal banishment and the Torah affirms this in its construction of the covenant. The bible is deeply concerned with the southern remnant of the old Israelite United Monarchy, Judah, that persisted for several decade’s after the fall of the North.

In the second temple period, when Judah and Jerusalem were rebuilt, then, the ideologues and mythmakers of the 2nd temple period, then, had to employ this archetype but in a new way that allowed for restoration. In this, I’m going to talk about Wendy Doniger’s ideas on ‘metamyth’–myths about myths– to show the acceptance and yet repudiation of the “exit only” archetype. They do this by portraying the restoration as a fundamentally new creation, thus linking cosmic themes of origin to historical events.

Or something like that. Its not finished…

I have until Wednesday morning to finish it. It is not looking good.

The rest of the schedule is here.

Wish me luck

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2 Comments Leave a comment.

  1. On April 5, 2008 at 1:06 pm Ian Said:

    Let me know if you want to meet up for some drinks or something while you’re in town.

  2. On April 5, 2008 at 1:17 pm Dr. Jim Said:

    Sounds good to me. I’m not sure what is happening in the evenings. I have family and friends up in Edmonton, but since it is an academic affair, drinking is pretty necessary. I will be staying at Lister Hall, methinks, at least for the first few nights. I will be in town on Sunday and leaving Friday around noon.

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