Book review. The Quarrels of Others: On Anti-Semitism
Anti-Judaism: The Western Tradition.
By David Nirenberg
Reviewed by R. I Moore
Nirenberg’s penetrating analysis of Shakespeare’s Jewish question transcends the hackneyed one of whether play or playwright is anti-Semitic. On the contrary, the crucial argument of this learned and disquieting book is that hostility to Judaism was far too deeply and pervasively woven into the fabric of Western Christianity for the presence of actual Jews to be necessary to arouse anti-Semitism. Long before that, Jews had been perceived (notably in Egypt) as hostile to all other peoples, their laws and their gods—the auxiliaries of successive invaders and the willing instruments of their tyranny—although those perceptions did not amount to a coherent or universal stereotype. But the Christians’ earliest records, the Epistles of Paul, show how much they identified themselves and defined their beliefs in opposition to Judaism. For the followers of Jesus, his death and resurrection meant jettisoning all previous certainty: “Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?” asked Paul. “For the Jews require a sign, and the Greeks seek after wisdom: But we preach Christ crucified.”
“In sooth, I know not why I am so sad,” Antonio wonders at the outset of The Merchant of Venice. What could seem more universal, more culturally neutral than melancholy? Yet if David Nirenberg’s argument in Anti-Judaism is correct, by Shakespeare’s time the negative associations of Judaism were so universal, and so close to the surface of Christian consciousness, that Antonio’s words immediately prompt the suspicion that he might be a Jew. Other characters soon echo the suggestion. His friend Salerio attributes Antonio’s mood to anxiety about the safety of the ships carrying his merchandise overseas, thus taxing him with excessive regard for his money; then, when Antonio repudiates the accusation, another friend, Gratiano, charges him with hypocrisy. Either way, Nirenberg writes, Antonio “appears to be, in the vocabulary of Christianity, a ‘Jew.’”
But he is not, which Salerio had promptly indicated to the groundlings by speculating that these anxieties might assail Antonio even in church. Antonio just as promptly denies the speculation. Nevertheless, Shylock, a Jewish moneylender, is struck by the resemblance when they meet: “How like a fawning publican he looks!” (In the Gospels, “publicans” are Jewish tax collectors.) Moreover, throughout the play, disconcerting similarities in outlook and demeanor between Antonio and Shylock float uneasily beneath their mutual loathing. “Which is the merchant here, and which the Jew?” Portia wonders as she arrives at the Duke of Venice’s court for Antonio’s trial. Nor does the confusion threaten the two protagonists alone. Whether Bassanio’s love for Portia is more urgent than his need for her fortune, and Jessica herself a richer reward for Lorenzo than the chest of jewels without which her elopement is unthinkable, both pairs of lovers constantly mingle the language of love and money. The same goes for the rest of the cast of what Nirenberg expounds as “a drama of chronic conversion whose every participant—including playwright and viewer—moves suspended like a compass needle between Judaism and Christianity.”
Nirenberg’s penetrating analysis of Shakespeare’s Jewish question transcends the hackneyed one of whether play or playwright is anti-Semitic.
On the contrary, the crucial argument of this learned and disquieting book is that hostility to Judaism was far too deeply and pervasively woven into the fabric of Western Christianity for the presence of actual Jews to be necessary to arouse anti-Semitism. Long before that, Jews had been perceived (notably in Egypt) as hostile to all other peoples, their laws and their gods—the auxiliaries of successive invaders and the willing instruments of their tyranny—although those perceptions did not amount to a coherent or universal stereotype. But the Christians’ earliest records, the Epistles of Paul, show how much they identified themselves and defined their beliefs in opposition to Judaism. For the followers of Jesus, his death and resurrection meant jettisoning all previous certainty: “Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?” asked Paul. “For the Jews require a sign, and the Greeks seek after wisdom: But we preach Christ crucified.”
Even so, for those early followers, the tension between the obligations of descent from Abraham and the desire to extend the message beyond his descendants was not easily resolved. The Scriptures, as they were still meant for all, could not simply be abandoned; they had to be accommodated to the new, transcendent reality, interpreted to show, according to Luke, how “all things must be fulfilled, which were written in the law of Moses, and in the prophets and in the psalms concerning me.” A new science of hermeneutics was devised to ensure, as Humpty Dumpty put it (but Nirenberg does not), that “when I use a word it means just what I choose it to mean.” Thus the followers of Jesus went about interpreting their beliefs and arguing out their relationship—and that of their gentile as well as Jewish converts—to the law and its demands. “To the extent that Jews refused to surrender their ancestors, their lineage, and their scripture,” Nirenberg explains, “they could become emblematic of the particular, of stubborn adherence to the conditions of the flesh, enemies of the spirit, and of God.”
The Jesus movement, searching in its early
years among a far greater variety of writings and teachings than would
eventually be canonized three centuries or so later, disputed its way through a
host of issues, from whether its founder was man or god to whether women could
be vested with spiritual authority. It also had to find ways to distinguish
between true and false prophets. A real or alleged relationship to Jews and
Judaism was one such test, easily invoked but hardly clear-cut. Those who
thought Christ a human prophet, for instance, denying his incarnation and
resurrection in the flesh, could readily be condemned as Judaizers. But so
could those who, holding him divine, insisted that he had inhabited a fleshly
body nonetheless.
The accusation was directed by Paul at critics who insisted on circumcision, which he saw as an obstacle to his conversion of the gentiles. In the following centuries, the charge was deployed with ever-growing agility and flexibility, until it became almost mandatory in any debate to represent one’s opponent as sharing in or defending the errors of the Jews. Jerome, who had “a notable hatred for the circumcised,” denounced as Judaizers those Christians who defended the decoration of churches with holy images by citing the model of the Temple in Jerusalem— and was himself accused of Judaizing by Rufinus of Aquileia for having impugned the sanctity of the Greek Scriptures by learning Hebrew to get better texts for his translation, which became the Latin Vulgate. Augustine of Hippo, whom the Manichaeans had called a Judaizer for accepting Christ’s incarnation when he converted to Christianity, also worried that Jerome’s use of Hebrew texts risked granting the Jews interpretive authority over the Christian Scriptures. That anxiety surfaced again in the twelfth century, when some sought to resolve textual discrepancies among their copies of the Old Testament with the help of the very same Jews whom others represented as emissaries of Satan.
The malleability of this rhetoric readily made Jews the victims in the quarrels of others. . .Among the fathers of the church, the most relentless scourge of heresy, and the one whose writings did the most to shape the Christian future, was Augustine of Hippo. For Augustine, the greatest danger to Christianity by far was the Manichaeism that had become widely diffused in the Middle East, North Africa and Persia, to which he had succumbed in his youth. The dualist Manichaeans condemned the material world as the work of the evil principle, the human body as a prison for the souls of angels stolen by the evil principle from heaven, sustained and perpetuated by sex and its fruits. From the perspective of the Christian convert, therefore, the Manichaeans represented an error diametrically opposed to that of the flesh-bound Jews. To go too far in denouncing Judaism—including the teachings of the Hebrew Scriptures, literally interpreted—was to incur the even greater danger of falling into Manichaeism. So the error of the Jews was not to have accepted the authority of their Scriptures in the first place, but to have refused the revelation that, without falsifying those Scriptures, had added the new level of spiritual enlightenment that was thenceforth necessary for salvation. Hence Augustine’s conclusion, which became the foundation for the place of the Jews in Christian society for the next thousand years: God had punished their recalcitrance by condemning them to wander the earth, like Cain, in perpetual exile, a constant reminder to Christians of the perils of infidelity—and as such, to be accorded the minimum degree of protection necessary for their survival.
By around 400 CE, the language of anti-Judaism constituted for Christian writers an intellectual tool kit of infinite versatility and adaptability. “Which of the prophets have your fathers not persecuted?” Paul had asked. There was little justification for this question even in his time, but to have been sufficiently attacked by the Jews quickly became a standard test of probity in the faith. “Is there anyone among the Montanists,” demanded Eusebius of Caesarea, inventor of Christian historiography, “who has been persecuted by the Jews or killed by the lawless?” He certainly had not asked himself whether actual Jews had had the opportunity of persecuting Montanists, followers of a sect that spread widely from Phrygia (in central Turkey) from around 200 CE; indeed, to do so would have betrayed a Judaizing subservience to the letter on his own part. Because Jews had become the prototype of every enemy—especially of the archenemy, the devil whose servant the Gospels had proclaimed them to be—every enemy could be described in terms of his Jew-like characteristics. The technique and the stereotype it generated was transmitted by the Venerable Bede in Northumbria nine centuries before it informed The Merchant of Venice, and four centuries before real Jews made their first known appearance in England on the heels of William of Normandy.
England prospered in
the years after the brutal but swift completion of the Norman Conquest, and
Jews flourished with it, though in small numbers. Their culture, contacts and
expertise had much to offer as trade increased, capital projects multiplied,
and society became generally more sophisticated. But prosperity was dangerous.
After a hundred years, the king, claiming the Jews as his property, set up a
special department of the Exchequer to regulate the loans made by Jewish
lenders to the lords. After another hundred, having been sucked dry, the Jews
were thrown out in 1290. The story was much the same everywhere else in Europe.
By Shakespeare’s day, England was once more in the throes of transformation as
another mercantile revolution challenged the established values and social
relations. The dilemmas explored in The Merchant of Venice were
now writ large: lending money at interest became lawful in 1571, but usury
(lending at excessive interest) did not. A fortune might ride on the
distinction, as Shakespeare’s father, at least twice charged with usury, knew
well. A greater fortune might vanish overnight if a venture succumbed to an ill
wind, as Shakespeare himself knew even better, for no investment was riskier
than a theater, ever vulnerable to the intrigues of the great or the whims of
the mob, to devastation by fire or closure by a plague. How were Christians to
prosper in such a world and remain Christians? There was no better way to pose
that question than by counterposing Christian merchant and conniving Jew.
The enduring legacy of
the early Church, Nirenberg makes clear, was far more than the familiar
stereotype of anti-Semitism: it was a language and a set of oppositions and
associations in which any conflict could be framed, or any community, party or
position attacked or defended by contrasting it with Judaism—irrespective of
the presence, still less the participation, of flesh-and-blood Jews. Thus a
series of massacres and forced conversions in the summer of 1391, followed by
another in 1411–16, emptied Spain’s cities of Jews and reduced its Jewish
population by as much as one-half. By 1500, the rest had been rooted out by the
Inquisition, ostensibly in pursuit of insincerity, duplicity and backsliding
among the converted. As the number of Jews fell, anxiety among Christians about
how to distinguish themselves from Jews nonetheless rose. Jews were made to
wear conspicuous badges and hats, and barred from selling food or medical
services to Christians; converts were forbidden not only to marry their former
co-religionists, but also to dine and socialize with them. Yet the search for
lingering Jewish loyalties and hidden Jewish blood became ever more desperate
and all-embracing, the language of poetry and painting ever more soaked in
anti-Judaism, as the conviction took root that, as Erasmus said, Spain was full
of Jews.
Neither the end of
Catholic dominance in Northern Europe nor the rise of secularism reduced the
potency of this language or the universality of its application. In the
seventeenth century, the bloody disputes among Englishmen on the basis of
political legitimacy and the nature of the godly republic were debated with
imagery and examples from the Old Testament. In the eighteenth century, most of
the leading figures of the Enlightenment found in Jews an archetypal
subservience to avarice and deviousness, and in Judaism a compelling
representation of primitive superstition as the progenitor of tyranny and
persecution. Their nineteenth-century successors contrasted these “Jewish”
habits of thought and feeling with the wholesome “Greek” values of reason and
idealism, and agreed that their elimination was essential to the progress of
society and the advance of reason. That way of thinking helped to shape the
modern social sciences from their beginning. Marx called for “the emancipation
of mankind from Judaism,” and Weber rehabilitated capitalism as a benevolent
and progressive force by identifying it with Protestantism (as the outcome of
Christian, not Jewish, attitudes to property and an expression of Christian
spirituality, not Jewish materialism).
* * *
All this Nirenberg
formulates with great subtlety and thoroughness, scrupulous to avoid the
generality to which his argument is reduced in summary. Anti-Judaism
identifies and anatomizes a persistent and pervasive thread in the fabric of
Western thought that no future commentary on almost any aspect of it will be
entitled to ignore. How it should change our view of the Jews in European
history, and their relations with people, institutions and ideas shaped by
Christian traditions, is harder to judge. My own interest in the problem was
first aroused by Léon Poliakov’s classic four-volume History of
Anti-Semitism, which appeared in English in the 1960s. What I found odd
about the work was the extent to which it focused on the ways Jews irritated
Christians, thus presenting as a problem about Jews one that seemed to me to be
obviously about Christians. In this it was representative of its time, and what
was known as “the lachrymose tradition” of Jewish historiography, the tale of a
wretched journey to an inevitably catastrophic conclusion. Conversely, the
place and indeed the presence of Jews in European history were largely ignored
in mainstream history writing and teaching, as the late Gavin Langmuir
demonstrated in a classic article whose point was proven when The
American Historical Review rejected it. Today, no serious account at any
level fails to at least try to integrate the greatly improved knowledge of Jews
and their history into its story, or to ask what qualities and changes in
European society undergirded their mistreatment and persecution.
By shifting the focus
from anti-Semitism to the place of Judaism in the deep structure of Western
thought, Nirenberg has recast the debate about the nature and origins of
anti-Semitism itself. Yet he also, in some measure, has returned to Poliakov’s
agenda: his concern is not with what the Jews did or how they fared, but on
their place in Christian, and indeed post-Christian, thought. Poliakov
described how Jews annoyed Christians; Nirenberg has shown how Christians made
being annoyed by what they perceived as the negative qualities of Jews (real or
imagined) essential to how they saw the world and how they argued about it.
Nirenberg is careful to insist that there was nothing inevitable about either
the development of the cognitive techniques that he describes or the uses to
which they would be put.
Even so, it is hard to assess the significance of these modes of thought, to weigh how they affected the Jewish predicament, without comparison to other victim groups in Europe and to Jews elsewhere. The very fact that, as Nirenberg decisively demonstrates, they were so deeply entrenched and widely applied from so early a date calls into question their power to explain change. By four hundred years or so after the death of Christ, the tool kit was to all intents and purposes complete, the thinking of everybody raised in the Christian tradition thoroughly suffused with its assumptions and techniques. The language and working assumptions of anti-Judaism were everywhere instinctively adopted in religious discourse and embodied in thought and worship. But as far as we can tell, they were not turned purposefully or consistently against real, flesh-and-blood Jews in most parts of Europe until around the middle of the twelfth century. At that time, Jews were widely dispersed throughout Western Europe, and though they labored under growing difficulties and had suffered some dreadful atrocities—most notoriously in connection with the preaching of the Crusades—many of their communities were prosperous, cultivated and able to live more or less harmoniously with their Christian neighbors.
Even so, it is hard to assess the significance of these modes of thought, to weigh how they affected the Jewish predicament, without comparison to other victim groups in Europe and to Jews elsewhere. The very fact that, as Nirenberg decisively demonstrates, they were so deeply entrenched and widely applied from so early a date calls into question their power to explain change. By four hundred years or so after the death of Christ, the tool kit was to all intents and purposes complete, the thinking of everybody raised in the Christian tradition thoroughly suffused with its assumptions and techniques. The language and working assumptions of anti-Judaism were everywhere instinctively adopted in religious discourse and embodied in thought and worship. But as far as we can tell, they were not turned purposefully or consistently against real, flesh-and-blood Jews in most parts of Europe until around the middle of the twelfth century. At that time, Jews were widely dispersed throughout Western Europe, and though they labored under growing difficulties and had suffered some dreadful atrocities—most notoriously in connection with the preaching of the Crusades—many of their communities were prosperous, cultivated and able to live more or less harmoniously with their Christian neighbors.
The descent into
persecution, impoverishment and expulsion over the next hundred years or so was
not only rapid and brutal, but from the perspective of the preceding centuries,
sudden and not obviously predictable. It was not, however, in every respect
unique. Around the same time, various groups of Christians—some more, some less
clearly defined by their responses to the changing expectations and demands of
the Church—began to be demonized in much the same ways as Jews, and subjected
to much the same forms of persecution. So, less clearly, did others, defined as
deviant by real or alleged irregularities in respect of character, condition or
sexual orientation—among them the indigent, lepers, prostitutes and gay men.
Heresy also became a trope for thinking about doctrinal conflicts, regardless
of the presence of real heretics. The perceived proliferation of the “dualist”
heresy in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries—the specter of Manichaeism
raising its head again—owed far more to the need of the classroom for ways of
articulating the problem of evil and responses to it than to any contemporary
heretics or heretical organizations. From the fourteenth to the seventeenth
centuries, witches and demons were made to serve the same purpose. In both
cases, as in that of Judaism, the endorsement of the resulting stereotypes by
high culture, though not a direct cause of the subsequent persecution,
contributed immeasurably to the climate that made it possible. We cannot look
to the particular circumstances or disadvantages of any of these categories of
victims, grave as some were, to account for the chill wind that blew on them
all.
Beyond Western Europe,
the question becomes still more insistent. Anti-Judaism, after all, was formed
not there but around the Mediterranean, and especially in the Middle East. In a
brilliant chapter, Nirenberg shows how Muhammad’s earliest followers faced
exactly the same paradox as Jesus’ in embracing a revelation from which
everything must begin afresh while continuing to respect the authority of the
Hebrew Scriptures. They resolved it in very similar ways: Jews were depicted as
resisting the revelation of Muhammad and even plotting against his life; it
quickly became habitual in controversy to represent texts and interpretations
under attack, or rulers showing favor to the wrong people, as Judaizing. The
Jews themselves, generally tolerated as “people of the book,” were not purged
or massacred nearly so often in the medieval Islamic world as in the West, but
for Nirenberg the seeds had been planted, to germinate in the spring of
modernity. He may be right, but it is a pity that he did not develop his
discussion of anti-Judaism in Islam beyond this early period. Whether modern
anti-Semitism has grown continuously from medieval roots or is in some way
directly associated with “modernity” (whatever that might be) is a
controversial question on which Nirenberg’s comments would be of great value.
The case of Eastern
Christendom is harder still. The early Church, like the Roman Empire in which
anti-Judaism was molded, was undivided, the writers who shaped it the fathers
of the Eastern as fully as the Western Church, but their works were studied, debated
and deployed with much greater vigor and sophistication in the East than in the
West for many centuries to come. As a result, the future of Jews was quite
different here. Without some account of the separation of the Church between
the sixth and thirteenth centuries, and some assessment of whether anti-Judaism
was developed or used differently in consequence, we have no real basis for
weighing its influence in the East. “I am by profession a historian,” Nirenberg
explains. “I have based my arguments only on primary sources that I could
consult in the original languages.” Who could resist this most traditional,
most impeccable and most disarming of scholarly evasions? Yet if Nirenberg will
not formulate a hypothesis or frame a question arising from his work that he
thinks his own remarkable abilities inadequate to resolve, who could?
It would be churlish
to end on such a note. A good book—and Anti-Judaismis a very good
one indeed—raises more questions than it answers. Nirenberg makes perfectly
clear, with good reason, the questions that concern him most. Martin Luther’s
onslaughts on the Jews were even more violent and destructive than those of his
Catholic predecessors. Nirenberg shows that they arose in the first place from
biblical interpretations hammered out in controversy with Luther’s theological
antagonists. This, not actual conversions for which little real evidence
exists, was the basis of his anxiety that the world was converting to Judaism.
Nirenberg concludes, “I am not interested in contributing to arguments, so
often dominated by apologetics and anachronism, about whether Martin Luther was
an anti-Semite or an architect of the Holocaust. My point is that Luther’s
reconceptualization of the ways in which language mediates between God and creation
was achieved by thinking with, about, and against Jews and Judaism.”
Generalized to embrace the whole of Western intellectual history, this becomes
a point of great importance. It will take some time to absorb its implications.