{"id":13948,"date":"1998-03-25T15:29:55","date_gmt":"1998-03-25T15:29:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/?p=13948"},"modified":"2020-07-27T08:24:02","modified_gmt":"2020-07-27T08:24:02","slug":"genesis-beginning-desire","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/books\/reviews\/genesis-beginning-desire\/","title":{"rendered":"Genesis:  The Beginning of Desire"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>Jewish Publication Society<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Philadelphia\/Jerusalem, 1995<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>by Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>Reviewed by Professor Shalom Carmy<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The publication of Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg&#8217;s <em>Genesis: The Beginning of Desire<\/em> was greeted by almost universal acclaim.\u00a0 Readers and reviewers, awed by her reputation as a lecturer, couldn&#8217;t help being impressed by her readiness to bring into play an unusually broad array of Jewish sources, from <em>midrash<\/em> to the classic medieval and modern exegetes to Chassidic and <em>Musar<\/em> texts, and they were intrigued by the range of her allusions to Western literature and culture.\u00a0 Only the academic pedant, shyly peering out from behind his sneer, disdains an approach so redolent of creativity.\u00a0 Others mingled their adoration with the occasional apologetic complaint about the difficulty of her style.<\/p>\n<p>I am in general agreement with the view that Zornberg&#8217;s volume is one of the most important books on <em>Tanach<\/em> to appear in this generation.\u00a0 My treatment will seek to identify the distinctive quality that makes her work a genuinely new contribution.\u00a0 Such analysis will explain, and thus alleviate, if not eliminate completely, the barriers to comprehension that have frustrated readers.\u00a0 A significant work in the study of Torah must, however, be understood not only for itself, but also in terms of its impact on the future development of <em>limud<\/em> <em>Torah<\/em>.\u00a0 This raises the question of the extent to which Zornberg&#8217;s way of talking about <em>Chumash<\/em> can become a model for others as well.<\/p>\n<p>In her introduction, Zornberg spells out the two key elements of her method.\u00a0 She writes:\u00a0 &#8220;I am trying to loosen the fixities, the ossifications of preconceived readings.\u00a0 To do this, a dialectical hermeneutics is essential:\u00a0 an opening of the ear, eye, and heart to a text that reflects back the dilemmas and paradoxes of the world of the reader (xii).&#8221;\u00a0 The multiple interpretations of the <em>Chumash<\/em> culled from <em>midrash<\/em>, Rashi, <em>Chassidut<\/em> and similar books foster a dreamlike, fantastic comprehension of the text, a web of what she regards as alternative but not exclusive readings.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Loosening the fixities&#8221; is, of course, the hallmark of much post-modernist literary criticism, as the inner landscape of the reader&#8217;s mind becomes more important than the virtually inaccessible horizon of the author&#8217;s intent.\u00a0 &#8220;Ultimately,&#8221; as Zornberg says of this approach, &#8220;the interpretive act becomes similar to the creative act (xix).&#8221;\u00a0 The great danger in such an interpretive method is that one can impose any interpretation on the text and get away with it, if the audience is willing to play along.\u00a0 Much contemporary tenured lit-crit, with its worldly-wise, tiresomely precocious jargon, affects a jaunty creativity barely distinguishable from caprice.\u00a0 Much current writing on the Bible, both the pop psychology books for middle-brow coffee tables and some of the turgid, earnestly with-it labors of the academic vineyard, consist in loose reconstructions of the text glibly authenticated as &#8220;the practice of <em>midrash<\/em>.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>An interpreter like Zornberg, for whom the meaning of <em>Chumash<\/em>, and the encounter with its Author, is of ultimate significance, must be more committed to a reader&#8217;s humility in the face of the text than representatives of the trends just mentioned: &#8220;there should, of course, be rules, decorums, a sense of traditional understandings (xvi).&#8221;\u00a0 Her primary methodological defense against arbitrariness is her allegiance to the library of Jewish literature with which she is equipped.\u00a0 By setting traditional sources as her origin and constant point of reference, she can appeal to the reader of post-modern sensibility without falling into the excesses characteristic of such readings.\u00a0 Whether this defense is totally adequate to the task of formulating a satisfactory <em>derech<\/em> <em>halimud<\/em> [method of study] will concern us later.<\/p>\n<p>The other indispensable component of Zornberg&#8217;s approach appears in a formulation taken from George Steiner:\u00a0 &#8220;The aim of interpretation is, I suggest, not merely to domesticate, to familiarize an ancient book:\u00a0 it is also, and perhaps more importantly, to `make strangeness in certain respects stranger&#8217; (xv).&#8221;\u00a0 Zornberg admits a dialectic of familiarity and strangeness, but she prefers the latter:\u00a0 &#8220;the <em>midrash<\/em> invites us to read the text with the truest &#8212; that is, with the least conventional, platitudinous, or even pious &#8212; understandings available to us (xv).&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Her preference for strangeness derives from the fact that Torah cannot be grasped passively.\u00a0 According to Zornberg, it requires the kind of strenuous &#8220;making,&#8221; that is consonant with her sense of the restlessness of <em>midrash<\/em>.\u00a0 One cannot take literally her implication that the truest reading is the least conventional, let alone the notion that truth inheres in the least pious understanding. \u00a0Yet the fundamental premise, that the complex reality with which we are confronted in the Torah defies static formulation and that simplification can falsify rather than clarify, seems eminently sound<\/p>\n<p>And if strangeness is a value in itself, then the much-noticed recalcitrance of Zornberg&#8217;s style becomes a corollary of her entire interpretive undertaking, rather than an accidental impediment.\u00a0 Making the familiar strange, inhibiting the conventional, banal response, is facilitated by calculated resort to obscurity and other techniques of complication.\u00a0 Zornberg&#8217;s strategies of quotation from Jewish sources, and even more so her deployment of literary and philosophical works, can be partly understood in the light of her preference for strangeness.<\/p>\n<p>At first blush, all this may seem perverse.\u00a0 The study of Torah is strenuous enough without adding further obstacles.\u00a0 The work of interpretation should be a revealing, not a re-veiling, should it not?\u00a0 Nonetheless, the faithful reader of Zornberg frequently gains an awareness of the Torah&#8217;s elusive fluidity and fundamental mystery that is less evident on a more linear, familiarizing reading.\u00a0 Her peculiar discourse thus succeeds in evoking an essential dimension of real Torah study.<\/p>\n<p>Let me illustrate Zornberg&#8217;s predilection for strangeness over familiarity with two examples.\u00a0 In the first one, her mode of writing gives an idea gravity and value that, if worded differently, would demean the Torah and its most revered figures.\u00a0 In the second, however, it is not at all clear that the Zornberg model is superior to an alternative formulation of the same insight.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Esau as the &#8220;Presenting Patient&#8221; in the Family<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Therapy-inspired writers on <em>Chumash<\/em> have increasingly tended to depict the <em>Avot<\/em> and <em>Immahot<\/em> as dysfunctional individuals, and their tribulations and challenges as the working out of their unhealthy psyches.\u00a0 The style, if not the repugnant content, typical of these lucubrations, can be seen in the following gem:<\/p>\n<p><em>Within his own family Abraham needed desperately to improve his inter-generational skills.\u00a0 Even as great a personality as our patriarch Abraham had a problem prioritizing family warmth &#8212; his quality time with his son, into his life routine.<\/em>1<\/p>\n<p>When cliched thinking is conjoined with disdain for <em>Tanach<\/em> and its larger-than-life personages, the results are predictable.\u00a0 We would not be surprised to hear that the trauma of the <em>Akedah<\/em> caused neurosis among the descendants of Abraham.\u00a0 If only Abraham, prompted by the right therapist, had cheered his son at the Little League game instead of trudging up Moriah, poor Esau would have grown up in a more wholesome household and much unhappiness would have been avoided.\u00a0 Is it possible, in our decadent culture, for a reverent interpreter of <em>Chumash<\/em> to address the tragic element in the unfolding of human destiny, even, and especially, the grand destiny of <em>Tanach<\/em>, without giving in to the tawdriness of our milieu?\u00a0 Perhaps the bold strokes can be produced only by titans like Ramban and Netziv whose vocabulary is untainted by the vulgarity of the fashionable marketplace.<\/p>\n<p>Zornberg brilliantly borrows from the psychological formulations without being overpowered by them.\u00a0 She ties the fate of Esau to the <em>Akedah<\/em> via Rashi&#8217;s commentary on the blindness of Isaac.<\/p>\n<p>According to one of Rashi&#8217;s proposals, the tears shed by the angels during the <em>Akedah<\/em> fell into Isaac&#8217;s eyes and dimmed them.\u00a0 As Zornberg unforgettably puts it:<\/p>\n<p><em>As Isaac lay on the altar, he looked up, the angels looked down &#8212; their glances met, in the form of blinding tears.\u00a0 Is there some suggestion of <\/em>lese majeste<em> here?\u00a0 Does Isaac probe the heavens with a too-scorching gaze?\u00a0 Is there a decree that his &#8220;windows be sealed up,&#8221; to maintain the human boundaries of vision?<\/em> (156)<\/p>\n<p>But what thematic connection is there between the <em>Akedah<\/em> and the blessings contested in Isaac&#8217;s old age?\u00a0 &#8220;Without the <em>Akedah<\/em>, Rashi implies, we understand nothing of Isaac.&#8221;\u00a0 Zornberg then interprets Isaac&#8217;s blindness so many years later as a delayed reaction to the <em>Akedah<\/em>.\u00a0 She strengthens her point by referring to Freudian hysterical blindness, and to post-traumatic eyesight disorders in women who had witnessed horrors which &#8220;made it necessary to suppress vision, to repress emotional response.&#8221;\u00a0 (In this case, Zornberg&#8217;s use of modern psychology makes the strangeness of the <em>Chumash<\/em> more familiar, rather than making the familiar strange.)\u00a0 The aftermath of the <em>Akedah<\/em>, according to Zornberg, may also explain Isaac&#8217;s premonition of approaching death a full 60 years before it occurs.\u00a0 In certain respects, claims Zornberg, Isaac is like one dead even as he performs a life of vitality:\u00a0 &#8220;the truth of the <em>Akedah<\/em> impress ultimately effaces all the gestures and costumings of the world (158).&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Zornberg next traces the imprint of Isaac&#8217;s <em>Akedah<\/em> experience in the lives of his family.\u00a0 After analyzing Rebecca&#8217;s repeated questioning of the value of her life, she turns to Esau, who &#8220;can perhaps be seen as the real victim of the sacrifice (160).&#8221;\u00a0\u00a0 Esau is like the family member who displays symptoms that shed light on the psychology of the entire family.\u00a0 It is Esau whose carelessness about the value of life manifests the shadow cast by the <em>Akedah<\/em> on the significance of worldly existence.\u00a0 It is he who follows the &#8220;jolting, disconnected trail of the hunter, the sense of drudgery &#8230; the sense of dismissal of the `weighty past&#8217; (164)&#8221; that is expressed in the spurning of the birthright.<\/p>\n<p>Even in abridged form, the reader can appreciate the thought-provoking richness of Zornberg&#8217;s discussion.\u00a0 One may quarrel with some of her novel ideas:\u00a0 at least one insightful individual finds the insinuation that Isaac&#8217;s blindness may have a psychosomatic element to it overwrought and unconvincing.\u00a0 What is of utmost importance, however, is her ability to incorporate prevalent psychological theories without being dragged down by the shallow, and hence morally and religiously crippled, diction and tone of so many conventional modernizers.\u00a0 There is no recipe for Zornberg&#8217;s achievement here:\u00a0 only the reverence, sensitivity and erudition she brings to her study and writing.\u00a0 One can only exclaim: <em>\u00a0Rabbotai<\/em>, this is the way it is done!<\/p>\n<p>Rashi (<em>Bereishit<\/em> 2:7) offers two rabbinic opinions about the origin of the dust out of which the first man was created:\u00a0 one has him formed from the dust of all four corners of the earth; the other, from the earth at the place of the altar in Jerusalem.\u00a0 In the course of a discussion informed by the French thinker Gaston Bachelard and the Romanian-born comparative religionist Mircea Eliade, Zornberg combines both views:\u00a0 human existence is paradoxical because both images of his origin are true:<\/p>\n<p><em>The difficulty of man&#8217;s situation is focused here:\u00a0 the material of his body (only at the next stage, God animates him with His spirit-breath) comes both from the four corners of the earth, from all the instincts and processes of the horizontal, from the dust into which he will disappear, and from the place of unity, the sacred spot of original creation, the<\/em> axis mundi<em>, where this world intersects with the higher worlds.\u00a0 There is an &#8220;opposition between space that is sacred &#8212; the only real and really existing space &#8212; and all other space, the formless expanse surrounding it [Eliade].&#8221;\u00a0 And man, in the midrashic view, is the meeting point of the two kinds of dust, of the one and the many<\/em> (16-17).<\/p>\n<p>An analogous approach to this passage in Rashi appears in a well-known essay by Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, whose work is unmentioned in this book.\u00a0 The Rav, too, treats the two opinions as indicative of the dual nature of man.\u00a0 It is instructive, however, to contrast his language with Zornberg&#8217;s.<\/p>\n<p><em>Man was created of cosmic dust.\u00a0 God gathered the dust, of which man was fashioned, from all parts of the earth, indeed, from all the uncharted lanes of creation.\u00a0 Man belongs everywhere.\u00a0 He is no stranger to any part of the universe.\u00a0 The native son of the sleepy little town is, at the same time, a son of parts distant and unknown.<\/em>2<\/p>\n<p>Let us examine the other interpretation of the verse in Genesis: <em>\u00a0man was created from the dust of a single spot.\u00a0 Man is committed to one locus.\u00a0 The Creator assigned him a single spot he calls home.\u00a0 Man is not cosmic; he is here-minded.\u00a0 He is a rooted being, not cosmopolitan but provincial, a villager who belongs to the soil that fed him as a child and to the little world into which he was born.<\/em>3<\/p>\n<p>Both passages are skillfully written.\u00a0 For Zornberg, the dialectic is that between the sacred and the mundane, while the Rav relates both aspects of human existence to the world of everyday experience.\u00a0 Yet the more dramatic contrast between the authors is between Zornberg&#8217;s elaborate verbal construction and the Rav&#8217;s simplicity.\u00a0 The reason for this divergence is simple:\u00a0 Zornberg&#8217;s self-proclaimed aim is to make strange what the reader might find familiar; the Rav&#8217;s is to make familiar what the reader is tempted to dismiss as distant and irrelevant to his or her existential situation.\u00a0 The Rav holds up a mirror to the reader, who is compelled to see himself in the text.\u00a0 Zornberg&#8217;s mirror is more likely to be self-referential, calling attention to the process of reading and interpretation, itself a constant of the post-modernist temperament.<\/p>\n<p>While Zornberg&#8217;s use of Western literature is truly impressive, it is, on close inspection, based on a selection that cannot be put down to accident.\u00a0 Her canon tilts in the direction of currently influential theorists like Bachelard, Bloom, Canetti, Levinas and psychoanalysts, especially those affiliated with the Objects Relations school, and towards the artists congenial to the theorists.\u00a0 Levinas, of course, clearly &#8220;belongs&#8221; in a <em>fin de siecle<\/em> Jewish book, and relying on Objects Relations concepts for a psychological understanding of Biblical figures aligns Zornberg with Moshe Spero&#8217;s important project on psychology of religion.4\u00a0 Other influences, like the poetry of Wallace Stevens, bright with self-referential hedonism, whose phrase &#8220;the beginning of desire&#8221; became the title of Zornberg&#8217;s book, are less obvious touchstones.<\/p>\n<p>Those literary and philosophical works that tend to bring heaven down to earth, as it were, that animate the great moral and religious adventures of mankind in familiar language and situations, play less of a role in Zornberg&#8217;s discourse.\u00a0 The realistic fiction of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky, the less portentous yet psychologically revealing narratives of Dickens and Trollope and Austen, the morally bracing prose of Johnson and Newman, are by and large absent from Zornberg&#8217;s pages.\u00a0 (Two of her quotations from George Eliot, however, contribute significantly to her interpretations.)\u00a0 Her Nietzsche is the forerunner of post-modernism, not the keen psychological satirist.\u00a0 The entire gamut of twentieth century authors, who did so much to express religious themes in a fresh and commonplace diction, T.S. Eliot, Auden, Greene, Percy, Chesterton and C.S. Lewis, among others, go unnoticed.\u00a0 Perhaps this is why paradox and irony abound in Zornberg, but not humor.<\/p>\n<p>Oddly enough, the discussion by Rav Soloveitchik that we just examined also resorts to literary allusion to clinch the point, but the difference in mood is revealing.\u00a0 The Rav quotes Robert Louis Stevenson&#8217;s &#8220;Home is the sailor, home from the sea&#8230;&#8221; to illustrate man&#8217;s nostalgia for the place in which he is rooted &#8212; this despite having been warned by a <em>talmid<\/em> that the author, and his poem, were viewed as children&#8217;s stuff, and did not amuse the intellectuals.\u00a0 In a word, the enterprise of making the familiar strange, and that of making the strange recognizable, while both legitimate, are likely to mobilize very different literary tools.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Associative or Analytic?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Like many of the Chassidic and <em>Musar<\/em> texts on which she draws, the twelve chapters of Zornberg&#8217;s volume correspond to the twelve <em>parshiot<\/em> <em>hashavuah<\/em> in Genesis.\u00a0 Like these precursors, she generally opens by quoting a statement of Rashi early in the weekly portion.\u00a0 Her progress through each <em>parshah<\/em> can best be described as associative rather than analytic.<\/p>\n<p>In this respect, Zornberg differs sharply from Nechama Leibowitz, to whom, for inexplicable reasons, she has been likened.\u00a0 Dr. Leibowitz&#8217;s method, above all else, entailed presenting the reader with a clear agenda of problematical elements in the Biblical text and the commentators, placing before him or her the pertinent exegetical literature, and demanding of the student painstaking attention to the exact wording of the <em>mefarshim<\/em> and the distinctions among them.\u00a0 While Zornberg&#8217;s remarks on the positions of the commentators she discusses are often enlightening, it is not her habit to make transparent, from the outset, the fundamental problems with which they, and she, are struggling.\u00a0 She frequently splices together phrases from different commentators, to the point where only the reader with the original at hand can reconstruct their meaning in context.<\/p>\n<p>This, too, helps to make the familiar strange.\u00a0 But it also inhibits the reader from critically engaging the crucial issues on his or her own.\u00a0 Sometimes this feature of Zornberg&#8217;s exposition merely retards the student; sometimes it actually detracts from her lucidity.\u00a0 It may be useful to examine briefly a chapter in which the effect of Zornberg&#8217;s associative writing is benign and another where it is less fortunate.<\/p>\n<p>One of Zornberg&#8217;s strengths is her devotion to the study of Rashi and his midrashic sources.\u00a0 On several occasions she brings together and probes far-flung statements of Rashi which clearly deserve to be juxtaposed:\u00a0 of particular note is her utilization of Rashi&#8217;s commentaries on <em>Nach<\/em>.\u00a0 The collation of texts is not a defining characteristic of Zornberg&#8217;s method:\u00a0 one rather associates it with academic scholarship or with the generous notes in the <em>Likkutei<\/em> <em>Sichot<\/em> (or, nowadays, a CD-Rom).\u00a0 But the fact remains that Zornberg contributes to this enterprise, and integrates these texts in her own unique manner, and with remarkable results.<\/p>\n<p>Thus a large part of her chapter on Noah interweaves no fewer than four places, outside of <em>Parshat<\/em> <em>Noach<\/em>, where Rashi speaks of the Flood and its import for human destiny.\u00a0 An analytic treatment would presumably start out by straightforwardly presenting the sources and subjecting them to a detailed comparison.\u00a0 Zornberg&#8217;s less facile way is to meander among the sources without indicating a clear-cut direction.\u00a0 The dedicated reader can follow her exposition here without too much effort, even while benefitting from the more leisurely, associative style of discussion<\/p>\n<p>And from this discourse emerges a remarkable discovery about the theological interpretation of the Flood.\u00a0 Despite the magnitude of the destruction, we are accustomed to think of the Flood as a wholly deserved punishment for the human race&#8217;s sins.\u00a0 Zornberg&#8217;s deliberation on Rashi and <em>midrash<\/em> discloses a need to justify the proportionality of the catastrophe, appearing in <em>Chazal<\/em> and in statements ascribed to Abraham and Avimelech.\u00a0 Thus, for example, Rashi&#8217;s Abraham argues that the annihilation of Sodom might confirm the suspicion that God is indifferent to the fate of His creatures, sweeping away the righteous together with the wicked.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Jacob Reads History<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>To clarify the difficult trajectory of Zornberg&#8217;s opening to <em>Parshat<\/em> <em>Vayeshev<\/em>, let us first consider the material as it might be viewed from an analytic perspective, and only then look at what she does with it.<\/p>\n<p>One might raise two questions about the point of departure of this section in the <em>Chumash<\/em>:<\/p>\n<p>1) How does Jacob, as depicted in the text, experience his return to Canaan?\u00a0 Rashi stresses the word <em>vayeshev<\/em>, he settled; Jacob thought he had attained security.\u00a0 Ramban emphasizes <em>eretz megurei aviv<\/em>, the land of his father&#8217;s sojourn; Jacob continues to regard himself as an alien in the land.<\/p>\n<p>2) How does Jacob interpret Abraham&#8217;s vision (chapter 15) which speaks of a 400-year period of exile, a period that is far from over at this point?\u00a0 Ramban would have no difficulty asserting that Jacob, by remaining the stranger in a land he does not fully possess, is fulfilling the prophecy; he is supported by several well-known rabbinic dicta.\u00a0 When Rashi says that Jacob was mistakenly convinced of his security, he might mean that Jacob took comfort in an oasis of temporary calm, but one might suggest that Jacob deemed himself permanently secure.\u00a0 Zornberg opts for the latter possibility, which she supports by adducing a Yemenite midrashic manuscript, recorded in <em>Torah<\/em> <em>Shelemah<\/em>, to the effect that Jacob believed the exile had come to a premature end, that, in some manner unattested in the literature available to Rashi, the four centuries had been reinterpreted and foreshortened.<\/p>\n<p>Offhand, Zornberg&#8217;s interpretation is far from the most obvious one.\u00a0 It seems more credible to expand the idea of exile to include subservience in the land of Israel, insofar as this broadening is presupposed in mainstream Rabbinic exegesis, than to posit a speculative calculation unhinted at in traditional literature.\u00a0 Moreover, one wonders whether the historical Rashi indeed availed himself of the marginal source which Zornberg produces.\u00a0 At the same time one is grateful to Zornberg for having uncovered a previously masked possibility in Rashi&#8217;s formulation.\u00a0 One cannot help noticing, of course, that in advocating an approach that pushes a radical reconstruction of the 400 years, rather than the more plausible one, she is advancing her own inclination for the less conventional understanding available.<\/p>\n<p>Zornberg, however, arranges the material in a different order.\u00a0 She begins, as usual, with Rashi, whom she interprets according to her approach, without indicating the possibility of alternative construal.\u00a0 She likewise offers the Yemenite <em>midrash<\/em> as an explanation of the discrepancy between her understanding of Rashi and the 400 years prophecy, without presenting other solutions.\u00a0 According to Zornberg&#8217;s Rashi, Jacob, somewhat in the manner of the literary critic who fancies himself a creator, is engaged in a vigorous attempt to reinterpret history, wishing to believe that the patriarchal family has reached its consummation.\u00a0 In an eloquent paraphrase of Rashi&#8217;s thrust, she writes:<\/p>\n<p><em>God, however, reads the plot differently.\u00a0 However plausible Jacob&#8217;s reading may seem, however satisfying aesthetically and cognitively, he has to face the shock of participation in a very different &#8220;plot.&#8221;<\/em>\u00a0 <em>The story of Joseph is the shock that rouses Jacob from his aesthetic composure.<\/em> (245-6)<\/p>\n<p>The introduction of Zornberg&#8217;s favored metaphor of reading brings on a spirited riff on the idea that the commentator is part creator of the text being studied.\u00a0 Erroneously translating Rashi to Psalms 16:7, she has him say that &#8220;we too should settle the texts in order.&#8221;5\u00a0 Only five pages later does Ramban&#8217;s view surface, and is its radical difference from Rashi&#8217;s acknowledged.\u00a0 Only then can the naive, confused, perhaps even annoyed, reader, try to untangle and reconstruct Zornberg&#8217;s thinking; only then can one undertake evaluating its plausibility and precision.<\/p>\n<p>Without in any way detracting from the value of Zornberg&#8217;s discussion, one may ask whether this mode of exposition is best suited to guide her readers to critical assessment and creative analysis of their own.\u00a0 If our goal is, as it must be, to enable our <em>talmidim<\/em> to study with precision and depth on their own, we might be better served by a <em>derech<\/em> <em>halimud<\/em> founded upon the orderly and transparent arrangement of sources and the accurate formulation of the salient questions.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Jacob Sleeps<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The few examples we have looked at, each time leaving out many interesting details, fail to do justice either to the suggestive fruitfulness of her production or to the frustration one occasionally experiences in trying to comprehend it.\u00a0 We have recognized the advantage in her strategy of making the familiar strange even as we have noted the value of countervailing tendencies.\u00a0 If &#8220;veiling&#8221; the text in a dreamlike gauze increases its aura of mystery and sanctity and thus protects Torah from vulgarization, bringing the text to earth induces a moral gesture of self-recognition that can be obscured by vagueness and abstraction.\u00a0 If an associative manner surprises the reader with unexpected, imperfectly sensed intimations of meaning that would otherwise be lost, analytic rigor is needed to avoid treating the text arbitrarily and disrespectfully, and in order to nurture the critical discipline without which independent study is impossible.<\/p>\n<p>It is Zornberg herself who provides the most felicitous expression of the essential tension between her own model of discourse and the familiarizing, analytic, critical alternative.\u00a0 She remarks on Jacob&#8217;s fear, when he awakes after the vision of the ladder:\u00a0 had he known the holiness of the place, he would never have slept there.\u00a0 <em>Halachah<\/em> prohibits such behavior.\u00a0 As Zornberg amply documents, Jacob, the dedicated scholar at the Academy of Shem and Ever, and later on the vigilant shepherd in his father-in-law&#8217;s employ, is depicted as unsleeping.\u00a0 But, Zornberg observes, building on Chassidic and other sources, had Jacob not slept that night, he would not have experienced the prophecy.\u00a0 To quote Zornberg&#8217;s words:<\/p>\n<p><em>God shifts the scenes, alters the lighting, all for the purpose that the &#8220;righteous man should sleep there.&#8221;\u00a0 There is a profound intimation here about the dynamics of sleep, about loss of consciousness and the possible gifts of unconsciousness, about knowing and dreaming.<\/em> (190)<\/p>\n<p>One might undertake to unpack and repackage Zornberg&#8217;s prose so as to maximize its accessibility for the waking, analytic consciousness:\u00a0 a list of newly relevant sources, on the one hand; a compendium of novel interpretations, on the other hand.\u00a0 This kind of effort would no doubt be very useful.\u00a0 It would contribute significantly to our study of <em>Chumash<\/em>.\u00a0 Yet such a domestication and simplification of Zornberg&#8217;s method would also forfeit the advantages of her peculiar mode of discourse, the gifts of knowing that come in dreaming, the vision that could not have occurred had the prophet known where he was.<\/p>\n<p>Committed as I am to the primacy of analytic, critical thought and interpretation, I will continue my relationship with this remarkable book.\u00a0 I will do so not only because Zornberg&#8217;s wide erudition and many innovative suggestions have not worn thin despite the somewhat unnaturally microscopic intellectual labor entailed by reviewing a volume of this size and complexity.\u00a0 Not the least of Zornberg&#8217;s virtues is her reminder that there is a spiritual reality and intellectual discoveries that emerge most authentically from the playful twilight of the dream, that there is a strangeness to truth and a truth to strangeness, that survive into the familiar daylight of Torah creativity and religious striving.<\/p>\n<p><em>Professor Carmy teaches Jewish Studies and Philosophy at Yeshiva University and is a consulting editor of<\/em> Tradition.<\/p>\n<p><em>The author wishes to thank Judah Dardik, Asher Friedman, Aaron Liebman, Bernard and Shari Stahl and Rabbi Joseph Wanefsky for their comments on the contents of this essay.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>Notes<\/strong><\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>I first cited these sentences in &#8220;To Get the Better of Words: An Apology for Yir&#8217;at Shamayim in Academic Jewish Studies&#8221; (The Torah U-Madda Journal 2 (1990), 7-24) 10. At the time I was credited with composing them myself. Sorry, these are the actual words penned by a serious Orthodox scholar-rabbi.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>2 &#8220;Majesty and Humility&#8221; (Tradition 17:2, Spring 1978) 27.<\/p>\n<ol start=\"3\">\n<li>Ibid. 29.<\/li>\n<li><em>Religious Objects as Psychological Structures<\/em> (University of Chicago, 1992).<\/li>\n<li>Rashi in Psalms had quoted a midrashic interpretation of the verse. In dismissing it, he says: &#8220;But (<em>ach<\/em>) we must resolve the texts in order.&#8221; Zornberg read <em>af<\/em> (we too), and concluded that Rashi was advocating the freedom of <em>midrash<\/em> when, in fact, he meant the opposite: his interpretation is restricted to that compatible with the order of the text.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> The publication of Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg&#8217;s Genesis: The Beginning of Desire was greeted by almost universal acclaim.  Readers and reviewers, awed by her reputation as a lecturer, couldn&#8217;t help being impressed by her readiness to bring into play an unusually broad array of Jewish sources, from midrash to the classic medieval and modern exegetes to Chassidic and Musar texts, and they were intrigued by the range of her allusions to Western literature and culture. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":718,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"ep_exclude_from_search":false,"_cloudinary_featured_overwrite":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[90],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-13948","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-reviews","issues-spring-19985758"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v24.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Genesis: The Beginning of Desire - Jewish Action<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"The publication of Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg&#039;s Genesis: The Beginning of Desire was greeted by almost universal acclaim. 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Readers and reviewers, awed by her reputation as a lecturer, couldn&#039;t help being impressed by her readiness to bring into play an unusually broad array of Jewish sources, from midrash to the classic medieval and modern exegetes to Chassidic and Musar texts, and they were intrigued by the range of her allusions to Western literature and culture.\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/books\/reviews\/genesis-beginning-desire\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Jewish Action\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:publisher\" content=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/JewishAction\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"1998-03-25T15:29:55+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2020-07-27T08:24:02+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/content\/uploads\/2017\/10\/jewish-action-logo.png\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:width\" content=\"1\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:height\" content=\"1\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:type\" content=\"image\/png\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Written by\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:label2\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data2\" content=\"23 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"Article\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/books\/reviews\/genesis-beginning-desire\/#article\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/books\/reviews\/genesis-beginning-desire\/\"},\"author\":{\"name\":\"\",\"@id\":\"\"},\"headline\":\"Genesis: The Beginning of Desire\",\"datePublished\":\"1998-03-25T15:29:55+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2020-07-27T08:24:02+00:00\",\"mainEntityOfPage\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/books\/reviews\/genesis-beginning-desire\/\"},\"wordCount\":4618,\"commentCount\":0,\"publisher\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/wp\/#organization\"},\"articleSection\":[\"Reviews\"],\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"CommentAction\",\"name\":\"Comment\",\"target\":[\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/books\/reviews\/genesis-beginning-desire\/#respond\"]}]},{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/books\/reviews\/genesis-beginning-desire\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/books\/reviews\/genesis-beginning-desire\/\",\"name\":\"Genesis: The Beginning of Desire - Jewish Action\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/wp\/#website\"},\"datePublished\":\"1998-03-25T15:29:55+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2020-07-27T08:24:02+00:00\",\"description\":\"The publication of Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg's Genesis: The Beginning of Desire was greeted by almost universal acclaim. 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