Signs of sexuality in a book about death seen through a psychoanalytic lens: Paradox and parody in play and perversion

Whereas the Song of Songs can be said to be about Eros, the Book of Job could be about Thanatos. Yet, the Song ends with a crucial reference to death, and in the Book of Job there are subtle traces of sexuality: the first chapter tells about probably promiscuous parties held by Job’s children who th...

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Main Author: Pieter van der Zwan
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2023-04-01
Series:Verbum et Ecclesia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/2638
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author_facet Pieter van der Zwan
author_sort Pieter van der Zwan
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description Whereas the Song of Songs can be said to be about Eros, the Book of Job could be about Thanatos. Yet, the Song ends with a crucial reference to death, and in the Book of Job there are subtle traces of sexuality: the first chapter tells about probably promiscuous parties held by Job’s children who then die during such a feast. Job reacts by referring to the womb, which presumably has sexual connotations. The womb is once again an issue in chapters 3 and 10. Twice he mentions breasts, although negatively connoted. In his last speech, Job suddenly refers several times to hypothetical transgressions with women, which betrays his hidden desires behind his piety. In addition, apart from body-parts such as the feet, hands and heart, a tail, loins and even a nose might sometimes be interpreted as euphemisms with phallic hints. In the final chapter his three ‘new’ daughters are the most beautiful in the world, perhaps presenting him as eventually allowing his libido to be re-introjected. Through a psychoanalytical lens it is, however, possible to make sense of this unexpected presence of sexual traces in a book about death. Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: Approaching texts from a psychoanalytical perspective challenges historical-critical exegesis by questioning its assumption that universality dissolves into historicity. It adds unconscious aspects of a text, here interpreting unexpected traces of sexuality in a book about mourning. This is done in a divergent way by pointing out various possible understandings.
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spelling doaj.art-e9167c831607425c8fb8027d0f165b2a2023-05-03T11:41:25ZafrAOSISVerbum et Ecclesia1609-99822074-77052023-04-01441e1e710.4102/ve.v44i1.26381821Signs of sexuality in a book about death seen through a psychoanalytic lens: Paradox and parody in play and perversionPieter van der Zwan0Department of Religion Studies, Faculty of Humanities, University of Johannesburg, South AfricaWhereas the Song of Songs can be said to be about Eros, the Book of Job could be about Thanatos. Yet, the Song ends with a crucial reference to death, and in the Book of Job there are subtle traces of sexuality: the first chapter tells about probably promiscuous parties held by Job’s children who then die during such a feast. Job reacts by referring to the womb, which presumably has sexual connotations. The womb is once again an issue in chapters 3 and 10. Twice he mentions breasts, although negatively connoted. In his last speech, Job suddenly refers several times to hypothetical transgressions with women, which betrays his hidden desires behind his piety. In addition, apart from body-parts such as the feet, hands and heart, a tail, loins and even a nose might sometimes be interpreted as euphemisms with phallic hints. In the final chapter his three ‘new’ daughters are the most beautiful in the world, perhaps presenting him as eventually allowing his libido to be re-introjected. Through a psychoanalytical lens it is, however, possible to make sense of this unexpected presence of sexual traces in a book about death. Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: Approaching texts from a psychoanalytical perspective challenges historical-critical exegesis by questioning its assumption that universality dissolves into historicity. It adds unconscious aspects of a text, here interpreting unexpected traces of sexuality in a book about mourning. This is done in a divergent way by pointing out various possible understandings.https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/2638book of jobpsychoanalyticalsexualitymourningtörök.
spellingShingle Pieter van der Zwan
Signs of sexuality in a book about death seen through a psychoanalytic lens: Paradox and parody in play and perversion
Verbum et Ecclesia
book of job
psychoanalytical
sexuality
mourning
török.
title Signs of sexuality in a book about death seen through a psychoanalytic lens: Paradox and parody in play and perversion
title_full Signs of sexuality in a book about death seen through a psychoanalytic lens: Paradox and parody in play and perversion
title_fullStr Signs of sexuality in a book about death seen through a psychoanalytic lens: Paradox and parody in play and perversion
title_full_unstemmed Signs of sexuality in a book about death seen through a psychoanalytic lens: Paradox and parody in play and perversion
title_short Signs of sexuality in a book about death seen through a psychoanalytic lens: Paradox and parody in play and perversion
title_sort signs of sexuality in a book about death seen through a psychoanalytic lens paradox and parody in play and perversion
topic book of job
psychoanalytical
sexuality
mourning
török.
url https://verbumetecclesia.org.za/index.php/ve/article/view/2638
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