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Biblical Blaspheming: Trials of the Sacred for a Secular Age. By Yvonne Sherwood. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012. xiii + 387 pages. $99.00.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2014

William J. Collinge*
Affiliation:
Mount St. Mary's University, MD
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © College Theology Society 2013 

Yvonne Sherwood, professor of biblical studies at the University of Kent, moved into a Biblical Studies Department from English literature in 1990. She found that literary criticism was present in her new department, but “the key figures spoke Greek, German, Latin and English, rather than French” (130). Sherwood's approach, by contrast, is shaped by French postmodernism, especially Jacques Derrida, who is cited more often in the index to her book than any other nonbiblical figure.

Biblical Blaspheming's opening chapter, the longest (ninety pages) and most central to the book's argument, exemplifies Sherwood's approach, always keeping one eye on the Bible and the other on contemporary British culture. She starts from (and frequently recurs to) the public response to an exhibition in 2009 at the Glasgow Museum of Modern Art, in which a performance artist tore up and ate pages of a Bible and put other pages “down her clothes to embellish her breasts and genitalia” (9), while another exhibit invited visitors to write in a Bible, yielding scurrilous graffiti for the most part. From here, she traces the evolution in English law and culture from blasphemy as an offense against God to “hate speech” as an offense against someone else's religious beliefs. English blasphemy laws were abolished only in 2008, as “non-human rights compliant,” while at the same time the law moved closer to treating religion as central to an individual's identity, and thus deserving the same respect as race and sexual orientation—an admittedly awkward fit, since one may change one's religion, unlike one's race and sexual orientation. The second main theme of the first chapter is how the Bible itself “‘blasphemes’ against modernised, benevolent versions of itself” (73). A target throughout the book is the modern “liberal Bible,” left unread but venerated as a source of tolerance, inclusivity, human rights, “the amelioration and cultivation of the subject” (164), and of all that is respectable in modern political society.

The remaining nine chapters are more specialized studies that develop themes related, sometimes tangentially, to those of the first chapter. A chapter titled “Prophetic Scatology” likens the prophets to the Britart movement of the 1990s, which developed “a scatological aesthetics for the tired of seeing” (Jake and Dinos Chapman, quoted on p. 160); American readers are most likely to remember Chris Ofili's The Holy Virgin Mary, a black Madonna surrounded by pornographic cutouts and encrusted with elephant dung. Four-letter words not commonly found in Horizons reviews abound. Three chapters focus on the Akedah, the “binding” and (near) sacrifice of Isaac, or perhaps Ishmael, by Abraham. One chapter is a bitterly sardonic letter from Isaac to his father; another relates the event to contemporary BDSM (expanded as “bondage, discipline/dominance, sado-masochism” or the like); while the third traces the “pre-critical ‘critique’” of this story within the biblical text itself and in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic tradition. In an entirely different vein, the chapter “On the Genesis of the Alliance between the Bible and Rights” traces the origins of the “liberal Bible” to the theopolitical conflicts of seventeenth-century England and argues that the biblical text itself justifies Robert Filmer's patriarchal-authoritarianism equally well as it does John Locke's democratic theory.

True to postmodern form, Sherwood deftly dodges any attempt to categorize or pigeonhole her, even as a postmodernist (e.g., 220). If she is a Jew, a Christian, an atheist, a Scientologist, she does not let on. Of what value is Biblical Blaspheming to readers such as the present reviewer and much of the audience of Horizons, who read the Bible as the word of God within a faith community? The book is often illuminating regarding both the Bible and modern culture. Like Flannery O'Connor, Sherwood reminds us that the Bible and its God do not sit well together with human ideas of respectability or political correctness, and that it sometimes takes a prophet to shock us into realizing that fact. We come away also with an enhanced awareness of the inescapable yet fruitful tension between text and tradition. After a while, however, Biblical Blasphemies comes to seem, as a French philosopher might put it, de trop, and I can't imagine using more than bits and pieces of it in teaching.