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Rabbinic tales of destruction: gender, sex, and disability in the ruins of Jerusalem
Analyzing early Jewish accounts of the destruction of the Second Temple, Julia Watts Belser illuminates the brutal body costs of Roman conquest. Drawing on disability studies, feminist theory, and new materialist ecological thought, Belser reveals how rabbinic discourses of gender, sexuality, and the body are shaped in the shadow of empire
Drawing Torah from Troubling Texts
In: The journal of Jewish ethics: the journal of the Society of Jewish Ethics, Band 6, Heft 2, S. 140-152
ISSN: 2334-1785
Abstract
This article argues for the importance of developing queer feminist disability ethics in ways that push beyond the conventional canon, acknowledging the violence present in many traditional texts and their failures to do justice to lived disability experience. Critiquing a famous debate in the Babylonian Talmud, Ketubot 17a, in which Hillel and Shammai debate the permissibility of telling a lie in order to praise the beauty of a disabled bride at her wedding, the author argues for a Jewish disability ethics that engages secular disability arts. Examining the artistry of queer disabled dancer Claire Cunningham, the essay draws out the embodied ethical insights expressed through disability arts and argues that Cunningham's work offers a more compelling answer to the Talmud's question—in her claim that love lodges in the tangible acts of paying attention to another.
Beyond the Quest for the Cure: Forging Disability-Sensitive Jewish Bioethics
In: The journal of Jewish ethics: the journal of the Society of Jewish Ethics, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 161-179
ISSN: 2334-1785
While Jewish bioethicists frequently grapple with questions about the permissibility of gene therapies in a Jewish context, this article critiques the way in which scientific, religious, and popular reflection about genetic intervention designed to eliminate disability frequently sidelines the objections of specific disability communities and marginalizes their epistemic knowledge about disability experience. The author argues that decisions about genetic intervention and similar curative technologies must not go forward without a substantive way to take seriously the critiques raised by certain disability communities. Probing classical Jewish sources that recount rabbinic resistance to Roman medical prowess, the article illuminates how curative technology can become an expression of power and domination. The author's disability-sensitive reading of these texts underscores the bodily sovereignty of disabled people, affirming the significance of disabled people's lives without regard to conventional markers of productivity and worth, cherishing the embodied presence of disability in the world.
Strange Texts and Unexpected Pairings: Reflections on Pedagogy in Conversation with Eric Lawee
In: The journal of Jewish ethics: the journal of the Society of Jewish Ethics, Band 3, Heft 1, S. 63-67
ISSN: 2334-1785
Disability and the Social Politics of "Natural" Disaster
In: Worldviews: global religions, culture and ecology, Band 19, Heft 1, S. 51-68
ISSN: 1568-5357
The stories we tell about crisis and catastrophe often intensify structural violence, augmenting existing dynamics of racism, sexism, classism, and ableism. Disaster stories often reinforce cultural narratives of suffering womanhood and tragic stories of disability to portray people with disabilities—especially women—as "natural" and "inevitable" victims of a harsh new world. Examining both contemporary rhetoric in the wake of Hurricane Katrina and classical rabbinic Jewish narrative, I argue that tales of communities in crisis commonly depoliticize disaster. By inscribing the disabled body with a narrative of "natural" vulnerabilities and inevitable suffering, conventional disaster discourse obscures the political significance of structural inequalities that render people with disabilities more at risk in disaster. Bringing together disability studies scholarship and Jewish feminist ethics, I challenge the discursive tendency to portray disabled individuals as symbols of suffering—and to focus on the pathos of an individual in distress instead of critiquing social inequality. I advocate a constructive, redemptive storytelling that illuminates and critiques social and political exclusion, that underscores the agency and dignity of people in crisis, that valorizes the disability justice movement's call for interdependence in community, and that captures the artistry and resiliency of disabled lives.
Introduction
In: Worldviews: global religions, culture and ecology, Band 19, Heft 1, S. 1-7
ISSN: 1568-5357
Crying Out for Rain: The Human, The Holy, and the Earth in the Ritual Fasts of Rabbinic Literature
In: Worldviews: global religions, culture and ecology, Band 13, Heft 2, S. 219-238
ISSN: 1568-5357
AbstractThis article examines the religious significance of rain in Tractate Ta'anit, a 6th century volume of the Babylonian Talmud that addresses fasts in response to drought among rabbinic Jewish communities in late antiquity. Through a close reading of several key narratives within the tractate, this article examines how Tractate Ta'anit incorporates rain symbolism into key rabbinic conceptions of Torah, revelation, and divine compassion. As the tractate crafts rain into a symbol that expresses God's presence and relationship with Israel, it also articulates drought as the essential expression of divine absence. Within the tractate, fasting serves as the quintessential collective response to the physical and spiritual crisis of drought. Fasting practice in Tractate Ta'anit fashions the vulnerable collective body into an instrument particularly suited to cry out for divine answer. By invoking and intensifying the experience of suffering caused by drought, the community uses its communal body to align itself with both a suffering God and a suffering earth, each of which yearn for reconciliation.