Carnal Hermeneutics
By Richard Kearney and Brian Treanor
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About this ebook
Building on a hermeneutic tradition in which accounts of carnal embodiment are overlooked, misunderstood, or underdeveloped, this work initiates a new field of study and concern.
Carnal Hermeneutics provides a philosophical approach to the body as interpretation. Transcending the traditional dualism of rational understanding and embodied sensibility, the volume argues that our most carnal sensations are already interpretations. Because interpretation truly goes “all the way down,” carnal hermeneutics rejects the opposition of language to sensibility, word to flesh, text to body.
In this volume, an impressive array of today’s preeminent philosophers seek to interpret the surplus of meaning that arises from our carnal embodiment, its role in our experience and understanding, and its engagement with the wider world.
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Carnal Hermeneutics - Richard Kearney
Carnal Hermeneutics
Series Board
James Bernauer
Drucilla Cornell
Thomas R. Flynn
Kevin Hart
Richard Kearney
Jean-Luc Marion
Adriaan Peperzak
Thomas Sheehan
Hent de Vries
Merold Westphal
Michael Zimmerman
John D. Caputo, series editor
PERSPECTIVES IN CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY
Edited by RICHARD KEARNEY and BRIAN TREANOR
Carnal Hermeneutics
FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESS
New York
2015
Copyright © 2015 Fordham University Press
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
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Fordham University Press also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Carnal hermeneutics / edited by Richard Kearney and Brian Treanor.
pages cm. — (Perspectives in continental philosophy)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-8232-6588-6 (hardback) — ISBN 978-0-8232-6589-3 (paper)
1. Human body (Philosophy) 2. Hermeneutics. I. Kearney, Richard, editor. II. Treanor, Brian, editor.
B105.B64C345 2015
128'.6—dc23
2014040676
Printed in the United States of America
17 16 15 5 4 3 2 1
First edition
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Carnal Hermeneutics from Head to Foot
Richard Kearney and Brian Treanor
WHY CARNAL HERMENEUTICS?
1. The Wager of Carnal Hermeneutics
Richard Kearney
2. Mind the Gap: The Challenge of Matter
Brian Treanor
RETHINKING THE FLESH
3. Rethinking Corpus
Jean-Luc Nancy
4. From the Limbs of the Heart to the Soul’s Organs
Jean-Louis Chrétien
5. A Tragedy and a Dream: Disability Revisited
Julia Kristeva
6. Incarnation and the Problem of Touch
Michel Henry
7. On the Phenomena of Suffering
Jean-Luc Marion
8. Memory, History, Oblivion
Paul Ricoeur
MATTERS OF TOUCH
9. Skin Deep: Bodies Edging into Place
Edward S. Casey
10. Touched by Touching
David Wood
11. Umbilicus: Toward a Hermeneutics of Generational Difference
Anne O’Byrne
12. Getting in Touch: Aristotelian Diagnostics
Emmanuel Alloa
13. Between Vision and Touch: From Husserl to Merleau-Ponty
Dermot Moran
14. Biodiversity and the Diacritics of Life
Ted Toadvine
DIVINE BODIES
15. The Passion According to Teresa of Avila
Julia Kristeva
16. Refiguring Wounds in the Afterlife (of Trauma)
Shelly Rambo
17. This Is My Body: Contribution to a Philosophy of the Eucharist
Emmanuel Falque
18. Original Breath
Karmen MacKendrick
19. On the Flesh of the Word: Incarnational Hermeneutics
John Panteleimon Manoussakis
Notes
List of Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
A book like this inevitably depends on the efforts of a great many people. The project would, of course, have been impossible without the generosity and enthusiasm of our contributors. A half-dozen translators also worked to make possible the inclusion of so many of the leading lights of French philosophy. And the staff at Fordham University Press efficiently prepared the manuscript for publication. These people, and others, all helped the editors to pull together this remarkable volume, which introduces and develops carnal hermeneutics
for the first time. We are indebted to them and grateful for the support we’ve received.
Helen Tartar was an early and enthusiastic supporter of this project—a project that, tragically, she was unable to see into print. As the Editorial Director at Fordham University Press over the past decade, Helen was a great friend to continental philosophy and continental philosophers in the United States and abroad. More than simply an editor, Helen worked closely with scholars—both junior and senior—to actively shape philosophical discourse. She had a fine eye for a good book, a keen sense for the direction in which scholarship was moving, a purposeful work ethic, and a gentle spirit. Sadly, she passed away in an automobile accident just as this project was nearing completion. However, her spirit lives on in the work of the many authors she helped to discover and cultivate, and in the many books that she carefully shepherded to press. This collection is dedicated to her memory and to pressing on with the work that is her legacy.
We also thank Tom Lay, whose steadfast support and assistance saw the project through to publication during a time of transition at Fordham. He closely monitored our progress and was instrumental in keeping things on schedule, moving us to press in an expeditious manner. We are grateful to the rest of the team at Fordham, especially Jack Caputo, editor of the Perspectives in Continental Philosophy series, who has been a stalwart champion of this collection; Eric Newman, Managing Editor of the Press; and Adaobi Obi Tulton, whose copy editing helped to polish the manuscript.
Gitty Amini, Donald Boyce, and Murray Littlejohn all helped in the proofreading and editing of certain chapters. Their diligence and care helped us to eliminate a number of errors in early drafts of the text.
We are especially grateful to the skilled translators whose work allowed us to bring a number of these essays to an English-speaking audience: Carlie Anglemire, Anne Davenport, Scott Davidson, Christina M. Gschwandtner, Anne Bernard Kearney, Simone Kearney, Roxanne Lapidus, and Anne Marsella. Scott Davidson and Christina M. Gschwandtner deserve special recognition for the philosophical expertise they contributed to the project, and the speed with which they responded to numerous requests for clarification.
Finally, we are grateful for permission to include the following edited or modified essays and extracts in this collection: the section on Motion and Emotion
in Jean-Luc Nancy’s Rethinking Corpus
is taken from the journal SubStance 126, vol. 40, no. 3, 2011; Jean-Luc Marion’s On the Phenomena of Suffering
is excerpted from The Invisible and the Phenomenon
in Michel Henry: The Affects of Thought, edited by Jeffrey Hanson and Michael R. Kelly (London: Continuum, 2012); Jean-Louis Chrétien’s "From the Limbs of the Heart to the Soul’s Organs" first appeared in Symbolique du Corps (Paris: Presses Universitaires De France, 2005); Michel Henry’s Incarnation and the Problem of Touch
is excerpted from De la phénoménologie (Paris: Presses Universitaires De France, 2003); Julia Kristeva’s The Passion According to St. Teresa
is a modified version of Saint Teresa of Avila,
which was published in Saints: Faith without Borders (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011); and, finally, Paul Ricoeur’s Memory, History, Oblivion,
which appears here with the permission of the Fonds Ricoeur, was delivered as a lecture in Budapest on March 8, 2003.
We would like to add a special word of thanks to the artist Sheila Gallagher for the cover image, photographed by Matthew Littell.
Introduction
Carnal Hermeneutics from Head to Foot
RICHARD KEARNEY AND BRIAN TREANOR
The essays collected in this volume all address, in one way or another, the theme of carnal hermeneutics—that is to say, the surplus of meaning arising from our carnal embodiment, its role in our experience and understanding, and its engagement with the wider world. The voices represented here are diverse, each contributing to the view that the work of Hermes goes all the way down, from the event horizon of consciousness to the most sensible embodied experiences of our world.
Why Carnal Hermeneutics?
In the first section, Why Carnal Hermeneutics?, we show why our project of carnal hermeneutics is central to hermeneutics more broadly conceived, and to explain in some detail why this focus is necessary, productive, and timely.
Carnal hermeneutics, as the opening essay indicates, offers a philosophical approach to the body as interpretation. How do we make sense of bodies with our bodies? How do we read between the lines of flesh and skin? Building on previous hermeneutic models—the as-structure
of existential understanding in Heidegger, the dialogical play of questioning in Gadamer, the semantic surplus of meaning in Ricoeur—we try to show how the new carnal
turn in hermeneutics ranges across a wide spectrum of interpretation, from head to toe, from sky to earth, from the most sacred and sublime to the most tactile and terrestrial. What we propose to develop from previous hermeneutic projects are the following basic principles: (1) human existence requires an art of understanding as well as a science of explanation, (2) our understanding involves a finite, spatiotemporal being-in-the-world, (3) our finite experience calls for a phenomenological appreciation of meaning as a projection of possibility and reception of reality, (4) this meaning involves sense
mediations in a wide arc of signifying ranging from the proto-linguistic domain of corporeal sensation and orientation to the most advanced forms of linguistic articulation, (5) this extended hermeneutic arc transcends the traditional dualism between rational understanding and embodied sensibility, and reverses the prejudicial hierarchy of the senses where sight and hearing trump taste and touch, (6) this reversal—or more accurately redistribution—of our bodily senses enables us to see how the most carnal of our sensations are already interpretations: a question of tact and tang (from the same root, tangere-tactum); and, finally, (7) this equiprimordial redistribution of the senses invites hermeneutics to go all the way down,
abandoning residual tendencies to oppose language to sensibility, word to flesh, text to body.
Once we follow the hermeneutic ladder all the way from head to foot we find that text is body and body is text. If there is nothing outside of the text it is because there is nothing outside of the flesh. Word is flesh. This is the basic lesson of carnal hermeneutics: all experience, from birth to death, is mediated by our embodiment and only makes sense of sense accordingly.
By way of illustrating and substantiating these core principles of carnal hermeneutics,¹ the opening essay charts a hermeneutic genealogy of touch, from Aristotle’s discovery of flesh (sarx) as medium
(metaxu) to the revolutionary analyses of embodiment in the more contemporary works of Husserl, Merleau-Ponty and Ricoeur. One of its main aims is to show how savvy is as much about savor as savoir (from sapere, to taste), which means amplifying and deepening hermeneutics to embrace sensory orientation as much as intellectual understanding.
In the second essay, "Mind the Gap: The Challenge of Matter, we suggest that hermeneutics must undertake a Ricoeurian
detour through carnality in a wide variety of applications, including new philosophical realisms and materialisms and the work of the
hard sciences from which they often hail. Such a detour is especially important when taking up issues like the environment, neuroscience, health, and more general questions of matter. This means that hermeneutics must be willing to engage modes of thinking that see carnal embodiment as hard, material reality in addition to those that see it as cipher or symbol. Far from attempting to
objectivize hermeneutics or
subjectivize science, the essay argues we should take seriously the possibilities inherent in Ricoeur’s dictum that
to explain more is to understand better. To this end, we engage with some contemporary approaches in which this might occur, including Michel Serres’s recent reflections on the
hard and the
soft of reality. We propose that preliminary gestures in this direction can be found in carnal hermeneutics understood in the broad sense of a reengagement with both our human senses (the medium of lived flesh) and the
flesh of the world" (which calls for a new environmental hermeneutics based on eco-phenomenology and extending to nonhuman forms of life).
These two opening essays, which constitute the first section of the book, are intended to serve as overall genealogies and topologies of our two guiding terms—carnal and hermeneutics—and set out some common coordinates for the essays that follow.
Rethinking the Flesh
The next section of the book showcases some major contemporary voices in our conversation: Jean-Luc Nancy, Jean-Louis Chrétien, Julia Kristeva, Michel Henry, Jean-Luc Marion, and Paul Ricoeur.
Jean-Luc Nancy opens this section with an intriguing reflection on what he calls essential skin.
Nancy addresses issues of touch in relation to life and death, taboo and zone. He shows how skin is where inside and outside are related and distinguished. It is where the in-itself finds itself outside of itself in order to be a self. Nancy explores how different languages signify the enigma of skin, exposing the roots of flesh in multiple etymologies besides his native French—Greek and Hebrew, Latin and English—yielding everyday poetries of flowering and fruition, sounding and stitching. In a particularly evocative passage on the caress (echoing several other essays in the volume), Nancy shows how in such moments of intimacy, the body moves beyond functionality, perception, and action—and in so doing, scatters seeds of carnal signification: Sign, signal, omen, or promise, the skin assures us it will never stop stretching out, being offered, and deepening. It promises that the body is entirely there within it, that it is the body itself and consequently that it is its soul.
In a companion piece on bodily movement, Nancy goes on to offer a detailed investigation of the intimate liaison between carnal motion and emotion, exploring the rich semantic play between the terms rühren, berühren, and Aufruhr. Touching, he says, sets something in motion—displacement, action, and reaction. It begins when two bodies move apart and distinguish themselves,
as in birth. Touch is the first rühren, but only comes to fullness with separation/birth—only a separated body is capable of touching. Leaving the un- (or under-) differentiated environment of the fetal-body-in-the-womb, the separation of birth opens us to touch, to contact, to the world, to relationship. This separation is a prerequisite for passion, the essence of which is to touch, contact from the outside. On this reading we are not in contact
; we are contact itself. My entire being touches and is touched. Thus, being is not separate from relationship and what we currently call the ‘soul’ is not different from arousal and receptiveness to motion and emotion. The soul is the body that is touched.
Jean-Louis Chrétien’s "From the Limbs of the Heart to the Soul’s Organs," provides a hermeneutic retrieval of the carnal language of the Song of Songs—a language that gives us a voice to probe regions of experience that would be voiceless without it. Following some of the great classical and medieval commentaries of the Song—Origen, St. Augustine, Gregory the Great, and others—Chrétien maps the homonymous isomorphism of the inner and outer man
by describing the various accounts of eyes, ears, hands, neck, and other bodily parts
of the heart. As translator Anne Davenport notes, the body is the word-bearer through which meaning reaches us and in which every possible call is answered
; but we can lose sight of this eloquence when we isolate the body and fail to appreciate it as incarnation of the word.² Chrétien’s analysis of the encounter with ultimate love in the Song of Songs suggests new hermeneutic possibilities for thinking embodiment and spirituality.
Julia Kristeva takes the hermeneutics of the body in a distinctly humanist direction in "A Tragedy and a Dream: Disability Revisited. Here she argues that disability, despite its obvious tragic dimensions, has the power to move us toward a
new humanism, offering itself as a challenge and a complement to the Greco-Christian
ontology of privation or
poverty"—a standard ontology which can give rise to acts of charity, but which risks turning disabled persons into objects of care. Kristeva argues that insofar as disability (physical or mental) reveals the incommensurable singularity (haecceitas) of each person—both those with and those without disability—it harbors the possibility of restructuring the social bond. Disability is the difference
that most radically confronts us with mortality and the finite limitations of all incarnate life, and that challenges us with a new Scotist ethics
of the singular.
Michel Henry’s contribution, "Incarnation and the Problem of Touch, directs us to the
phenomenological foundation of incarnation—the condition of possessing flesh. Phenomenologically, the body can appear in the mode of the world, as an object external to us. But in the mode of
life phenomenalization is different; here the old opposition between appearing and what allows it to appear breaks down in terms of what Henry calls
revelation. There is no longer separation, no
outside of oneself:
the revelation of life and what it reveals are one and the same. Flesh is the proper name for this unity and its auto-revelation. Arguing that the traditional phenomenology of the body always presupposes a second transcendental and constituting body—leading to impassible aporias—Henry proposes that we reverse this tradition so that the
original body is not the mundane body in the world but rather the flesh and its
auto-impressionality. The
arrival in a flesh is the truer and more radical meaning of incarnation that illuminates our human condition and the archi-passibility of life itself. Though Henry himself does not explicitly avow the rich hermeneutic implications of his reading of life (e.g., as a hermeneutic retrieval of Husserl’s phenomenology of the lived body and the Christian revelation of flesh), they are strongly present. And a similar point applies to Jean-Luc Marion’s subtle reading of incarnation and suffering in the wake of Henry’s work—offered here as
On the Phenomena of Suffering—an interpretation which he explores in his more developed analyses of
flesh" in Being Given and The Erotic Phenomenon.
In the last essay of the second section, "Memory, History, Oblivion, (published here in English for the first time), Paul Ricoeur picks up the question of lived suffering in relation to history, memory, and history-writing. Although he does not address the question of carnal hermeneutics per se, this late text points toward one of the reasons why such a
carnal turn is necessary: namely, to address the persistence of what Ricoeur calls
the wounds left by history and the consequent
call to justice owed to the victims of history." It is interesting to note that Ricoeur wrote this text to highlight the particularity of suffering touched on in his last major work, History, Memory, Forgetting. Under a variation of this title, Ricoeur stresses here the moral imperative to reconnect hermeneutic remembering to the concrete acting and suffering
of living beings. In preparing this paper, he reviewed numerous Holocaust testimonies (including films like Schindler’s List and Shoah). This essay may be read, accordingly, as a call for a new hermeneutics of the suffering body, in continuation with his hermeneutic retrieval of flesh as other
in study 10 of Oneself as Another (discussed in our opening essay). We might also note here that the wound of history
is an example of a broader concern with suffering bodies shared by other hermeneutic reflections in this volume—we are thinking not only of Julia Kristeva’s essay on disability but also of Shelly Rambo’s analysis of the scars of trauma, Ed Casey’s meditation on the pain of incarcerated bodies, and Anne O’Byrne’s essay on the umbilicus. These recurring references to wounding represent an important bridge between standard hermeneutic concerns with writing and reading (texts, narratives, testimonies) and the more carnal significations of the lived body (marked with traces, traumas, scars).
Matters of Touch
The third part of our volume comprises essays by leading contemporary continental philosophers—from both Europe and America—who explore a hermeneutics of body and touch in pioneering and original ways.
In "Skin Deep: Bodies Edging into Place, Ed Casey offers an engaging account of the complex liaisons between body and place. Beginning with a harrowing account of the body in solitary confinement, he proceeds to discuss the notion of
edge and
skin in terms of intervals and boundaries. Ranging through a compelling list of descriptions—from prison cells and MRI tubes to living rooms, porches, yards, and landscapes—Casey shows how the
lived body is both
absolutely here" and yet always edging into place between oneself and another. Drawing from phenomenologists such as Husserl, Merleau-Ponty and Sartre (with the Bachelard of the Poetics of Space never far off), Casey proposes an original hermeneutics of skin as the ultimate edge between body and place. We take in the world as a series of places felt in and through the skin.
For skin is the most intimate medium (metaxu) which both separates and connects each one of us with the world.
In "Touched by Touching, David Wood reflects on a variety of
quite ordinary experiences in the course of plumbing
the creative plurivocity of meaning murmuring within the concepts that most fascinate us. Touch, he thinks, is an exemplary case. Wood considers: the stroking, nuzzling, and licking of feral cats turned semi-domestic mousers; the confusing complexities of eroticism; visual and tactile intimacies in the case of romantic partners; the indirect sexuality of flowers via the work of pollinators; literary accounts by Neruda and Hopkins; and, finally, the unwanted
vampire touch" of leeches. Reflecting on these diverse cases, which extend the carnal to include the non-human worlds of animal and plant, Wood suggests that a very fertile site for carnal hermeneutics is the question of boundaries that is disclosed and traversed—willingly or unwillingly, with joy or anxiety—by touch.
In her "Umbilicus: Toward a Hermeneutics of Generational Difference, Anne O’Byrne proposes a hermeneutic circle marked by the umbilical scar, the navel that marks our belonging to another, as vulnerable, and as generated and generational. The navel as the
circular fold of skin at the center of us . . . the place where the hermeneutic circle makes a Mobius twist and interpretation turns inside out. Philosophical and theological traditions touch on the umbilical scar—from Christian monks at Mount Athos to Aristophanes’s circular people, and from Greek religion to psychoanalysis—but none plumb the depths of understanding necessary to account for the umbilical relationship. Why does the maternal body nurture and grow the fetal body rather than attack it as foreign? How does the fetus survive inside an immunologically hostile maternal body? Biology tends to get by as if it were
positing epicycles" and turning a blind eye, but some research suggests a new model of immunology in which the notion of a war between the self and all intruders (nonself) is replaced by a model of permeable communities that permit immigrants unless and until they present a danger. The fetus does not cause an immune response because it causes no immunological damage. O’Byrne’s umbilical hermeneutics directs us to questions of generational and sexual difference, and asks us to consider sense rather than meaning as the goal of hermeneutics. Such extended consideration has, needless to say, evident political and social implications for our contemporary world. Which reminds us here, as in other essays, that carnal hermeneutics often calls for an applied hermeneutics of lived suffering and action.
In "Getting in Touch: Aristotelian Diagnostics," Emmanuel Alloa brings us back to the beginning of hermeneutics. He argues that while hermeneutics as an art of textual interpretation was born in Late Antiquity in Alexandria, there is a pre- or even non-textual art of distinguishing which has to do with sensible diagnostics. Alloa provides a rich, scholarly overview of this non-textual tradition of diakrisis within the Greek world, especially in the medical tradition, and underlines the importance attributed to the different sense organs. In tune with our opening essay and other contributions to this volume, Alloa’s account confirms that touch has a peculiar position among the senses, being considered the lowest
and at the same time the most universal: all senses touch
their objects. With this thesis in mind, Alloa offers a close reading of Aristotle’s De anima, showing how it provides both a rehabilitation of touch as a crucial sense for orientation in the world and a strong rebuttal of reductionist readings of touch as immediate. Demonstrating how flesh is not the organ of touch but its medium, Aristotle inaugurated a whole new theory of sensorial diagnostics.
In "Between Vision and Touch: From Husserl to Merleau-Ponty, Dermot Moran explains how Merleau-Ponty reinterprets and transforms the account of
double sensation" (Doppelempfindung) discussed by Husserl (and other contributors to this volume). Husserl claims that double sensation is characteristic only of touch, and that this indicates a certain priority of touch over the other senses in the composition of the living organic body (Leib). However, Merleau-Ponty argues that the reversibility of sensation is characteristic of all five senses, and that it prefigures and founds the reflexivity of thought. Moreover, this intertwining—which goes by various terms in Merleau-Ponty’s work: the chiasm, interlacing, or inversion of the flesh—has ontological import. It expresses the ambiguous character of human embodied being-in-the-world,
which is the subject of his late work on la chair. Moran carefully charts this key development in the philosophy of sensation, showing how Merleau-Ponty’s account of intertwining grows from and significantly develops Husserl’s own account.
In the final essay of this section, "Biodiversity and the Diacritics of Life, Ted Toadvine takes up the meaning and value of the much-heralded notion of
biodiversity. Although this term is ubiquitous in both academic (scientific, economic, philosophical) and popular discourse, it is far from clear that it has real empirical or ethical value. Building on Kearney’s diacritical hermeneutics, as well as on Merleau-Ponty and his readings of Saussure and Valéry, Toadvine suggests a form of
biodiacritics. He argues that the diacritical perspective captures an insight into the experience of life as difference while preserving our sense of life as unity, and he does so in a way that helps us to explore sense
beyond or beneath apparent sense. The pre-theoretical sense of life that precedes any biological investigation of living things is, Toadvine insists, diacritical: it mirrors the coexistence of unity and difference. On this view, the unity of the different nodes of life is in the intervals and gaps that constitute them; each one
implies the whole and therefore hangs together with the whole insofar as its own identity is the determinate negation of every other moment within the whole. While biodiversity measures a kind of difference, it misses the
intervals, deferrals, and gaps to which biodiacritics is attentive. Each form of life, each being, is a unique set of historical legacies. And, as Toadvine notes,
it is precisely insofar as life . . . institutes an evolving history or even a figured memory . . . that it commands our respect and hospitality." This essay—along with frequent other references in this volume to matter, earth, animals, sacred bodies, and the environment—suggests how important it is to keep carnal hermeneutics open to extra-human forms of life.
Divine Bodies
The final section, Divine Bodies, helps illustrate how carnal hermeneutics can extend to the fullest range of meaning while keeping sight of our inescapably carnal nature. Hermeneutics, including carnal hermeneutics, navigates both the sacred and the terrestrial, ranging up and down, translating messages from above
and from below.
In "The Passion According to Teresa of Avila," Julia Kristeva deploys a psychoanalytic hermeneutic to interpret the life of a great woman visionary. She enumerates three characteristics of Christian life highlighted by its mystics: the Ideal Father who, loved, is the foundation of the subject; the resexualization of this ideal by the mystic (père-version); and the oral gratification of the Eucharist that reconciles the believer with the beaten Father. Teresa is offered as an archetypal example of such mystical hermeneutics. In her incarnated fantasies
the ideal father who persecutes her is transformed into a loving father, "jouissance and extreme pain, always the two together or alternating. These raptures are expressed in a unique narrative. Teresa loses her identity, becoming a
psyche-soma below the threshold of consciousness. Her visions inhabit the entire body and mind, including the philosophically underappreciated senses of touch and taste. They are part of what Kristeva calls the
sensitive imaginary" in which water signifies the link between the soul and the divine. The body is earth, which becomes garden at the touch of water. And the divine is brought down from its supersensitive status to become an element that nourishes and touches. Touch—psychosomatic contact—is the mode in which Teresa appropriates the Other. Transcendence turns out to be immanent: the Lord is not above, but within.
In "Refiguring Wounds in the Afterlife (of Trauma), Shelly Rambo asks the reader to rethink the notion of the
invisible wound in a manner that would draw on all the senses rather than privileging sight. The double wounding of trauma—the wounding event and its aftermath or scar—is said to result in a wound that does not close; and part of the task of trauma theory and psychoanalysis is to make visible what is invisible in the process of healing. Wounds, of course, are central to the Christian tradition, but Rambo focuses on the afterlife of wounds, the wounds of resurrection, and thinking these wounds in terms of the figure of the scar. Examining the case of the wound/scar associated with Macrina, sister of Gregory of Nyssa, Rambo notes the aporias associated with traditional visual readings of the scar, which she resolves via a multisensory, carnal reading. Macrina’s story also complicates the gendered politics of trauma and recognition—insofar as Gregory is displaced by the mother-daughter-maidservants relationships—in a way that reads scars not as a reinscription of wounding, but as a mark of the
complex textures of life." Finally, the story rereads traditional accounts of resurrection by emphasizing the healing aspects of touch. Rambo thus performs a hermeneutic retelling of a story of wounds which is itself a retelling of the Christian story.
In "This Is My Body Emmanuel Falque considers key elements of the Eucharist—Christ as the
lamb on the altar, the Eucharist as the
body of Christ, and what it means to
eat that body. The
real presence of Christ in the Eucharistic meal has always been controversial; and understanding it strains the limits of phenomenology: the phenomenological excess of
sense over non-sense; the increase of
flesh over body; and the
weakness in the forgetting of force." As translator Christina Gschwandtner notes, Falque’s work criticizes the phenomenological distinction between Leib and Körper for reinscribing a body/soul dualism that downplays the animality
of our flesh: [Falque] seeks to recover the ‘organicity’ of the body (in its concrete ‘flesh and bones’) and to take full account of its animal nature (the chaos or ‘abyss’ of our passions, drives and impulses).
³ Here Falque reads the viaticum as joining in the union of bodies in Eucharistic communion, and concludes with an account of abiding
in which the real presence is linked to desire. Neither fleeing from humanity, nor falling below its limit, Eucharistic enthusiasm animates the act of communion in the sense that the communicant is fully incorporated into God
such that his or her animality, corporeality, and desire are made meaningful and converted.
Karmen MacKendrick’s "Original Breath challenges the traditional non-carnal readings of
speaking" in the Genesis creation account: creation ex nihilo, God beyond space and time, humans as absolutely distinct from animals, and so on. In MacKendrick’s hermeneutic retrieval of this text, God’s calling the world into existence takes place in the presence of a there is
already in creation—formless matter that responds to God’s call, the ruach elohim (mighty wind, breath). Here breath is given form by matter and matter its meaning by breath.
The chapter follows the Genesis creation narrative, tracing the manner in which the breath of God breathes life into humans and animates animals, challenging us to think of meaning in matter. MacKendrick analyzes the naming of the animals by Adam, questioning the assumption that this task confers some form of absolute dominance, and suggesting that this call must await a response, nonlinguistic but carnally meaningful, from the creature named. Her account offers a richer option for human-animal interaction and relationship, one that, without conflating the human and animal, thinks in terms of a divine animality
and a continuous carnal creation.
Rounding out the collection, John Panteleimon Manoussakis’s "On the Flesh of the Word: Incarnational Hermeneutics, reflects on the claim by which
Christianity stands or falls: the Word became Flesh. He suggests that a long history of misreading and misappropriation has caused us to think in terms of spiritualizing the flesh rather than incarnating the spirit. Hermeneutics has forgotten the command
take, eat, this is my body" in favor of a textual rumination that results in regurgitation rather than digestion and sustenance. This is reflected in the marginalization of the Eucharist. Manoussakis offers a detailed and original reading of St. Augustine’s Confessions as an exemplary text of carnal hermeneutics in which he finds a conversion of the flesh
alongside the more familiar episodes of the conversion of the mind
and conversion of the heart.
This third conversion is evident in Augustine’s reversal of the traditional hierarchy of the senses by giving primacy to touch, in his use of the parable of the prodigal son to emphasize the flesh, and in his extended use of language associated with hunger, eating, and feasting.
The essays of this volume are not conclusions but rather openings to further dialogue and debate. They are signposts of things to come in the ongoing conversation of carnal hermeneutics. This conversation is, we suggest, marked by certain challenging characteristics. First, a radical commitment to interdisciplinary work, opening philosophical hermeneutics to fruitful exchanges with other human sciences such as linguistics, anthropology, theology, poetics, psychoanalysis, and politics. One of the greatest challenges for hermeneutics in the twenty-first century, as Ricoeur has said, is dialogue with the sciences. And for us today this also means expanding the hermeneutic circle—often texts talking to texts—to engage harder
disciplines such as cognitive science, neuroscience, computer science, and other environmental and life sciences. It is at the limit of phenomenological hermeneutics that we shall find both the task and test of its future. This volume presents itself accordingly as a series of invitations to think at the edge.
And these, taken collectively, suggest a further challenge of carnal hermeneutics: namely, to rethink, in a new key, the enigma of flesh that has so baffled philosophers for centuries and, above all, to realize that flesh can no longer be confined to a phenomenological account of the human body but must also be recognized as a membrane or medium connecting us to the flesh of the world.
Flesh is precisely the edge
where the human meets worlds that exceed and entreat it—animal and environmental, sacred and profane. It is the site of endless transmissions between selves and strangers where surplus meaning
comes to remind us that we can never be sufficient to ourselves. This surplus may be of the order of joy (viz. the reflections in this volume on eros, creation, life, and caress) or of the order of suffering (viz. the essays on pain, trauma, tragedy, and violence); but both orders serve to instruct us that there is more to flesh than meets the eye—or even the tips of our fingers and tongues. Flesh raises more questions than answers. And that is why this volume is no more than a beginning—a promissory note of work to come.
Why Carnal Hermeneutics?
The Wager of Carnal Hermeneutics
RICHARD KEARNEY
Part One: Making Sense of Sense
What is the sense of sense? How do we read between the lines of skin and flesh? How do we interpret the world with our bodily senses, and especially those long neglected in Western philosophy—taste and touch? How, in other words, do we discern the world as this or that, as hospitable or hostile, as attractive or repulsive, as tasty or tasteless, as living or dying? These are key questions of carnal hermeneutics.
A Matter of Taste and Touch
From the moment we are born we live in the flesh. Infant skin responds to the touch of the mother, hands and feet unfurling, mouth opening for first milk. Before words, we are flesh, flesh becoming words for the rest of our lives. Matter, no less than form, is about what matters—to us, to others and to the world in which we breathe and have our being. The old dichotomies between empirical
and transcendental,
materialism
and idealism,
are ultimately ruinous. Life is hermeneutic through and through. It goes all the way up and all the way down. From head to foot and back again.
Let me explain. I speak of sense in three senses. First, there is sense in the common connotation of physical sensation: sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch (as in: I have a strong sensation that . . .). Second, there is sense in the equally habitual connotation of meaning (as in: I get the sense of what you mean). And, third, we have sense in the original etymological connotation of direction—as in so many Romance languages, sensus, senso, sens—referring to how we orient ourselves in space and time, how we move towards or away from, fore or aft, hither or tither (as in: Je vais dans ce sens, à gauche plutôt qu’à droite). These three connotations of sense—as (1) sensation, (2) meaning, and (3) orientation—signify how we make sense of our life in the flesh.
Central to the interpretation of embodied life is evaluation. The ancient term for wisdom, sapientia, comes from sapere, to taste. Sapere-savourer-savoir. This etymological line speaks legions, reminding us that our deepest knowing is tasting and touching. We first sound the world through the tips of our tongues. Discerning between hot and cold, savory and unsavory, course and smooth. Living well is a matter of savvy,
as we say. Ordinary language knows this, and philosophical language is no more than an extrapolation of what we already know deep down.
Wisdom, in the end, is tact. That is what we mean, isn’t it, when we say that someone sensible is someone sensitive: they have the touch,
as healer, teacher, artist, lover. Just as, by extension, they have the eye, the ear, the nose. They are attentive, tentative, in touch with things. They get it. To have the right touch is to touch and be touched wisely. Touching well is living well. Hermeneutics begins there: in the flesh. And it goes all the way down, from head to foot.
Between Phenomenology and Hermeneutics
Contemporary continental philosophy has done much to address this question. But it has sometimes suffered from a tension between two related tendencies—phenomenology and hermeneutics. Phenomenology has done extraordinary work in rehabilitating the body. Think of Husserl’s analysis of Leib as intentionality, as active and passive synthesis, as primal and secondary sensibility (Ideas II). Think of Sartre’s brilliant descriptions of the body as caress, desire and possession in Being and Nothingness; of Merleau-Ponty’s soundings of the body-subject in its sexual being in The Phenomenology of Perception; of Levinas’s descriptions of eros, sensibility and enjoyment in Totality and Infinity; or of Irigaray’s pioneering explorations of eros as birth, touch, and taste in An Ethics of Sexual Difference.
These phenomenological inquiries opened new doors to a hermeneutics of flesh. And yet when the explicit hermeneutic turn
occurred in the 1960s—with the publication of Ricoeur’s Conflict of Interpretations and Gadamer’s Truth and Method (inspired by Heidegger and Dilthey)—we witnessed an embrace of language at the expense of body. The journey from flesh to text often forgot a return ticket. And so we find the linguistic turn
of hermeneutics parting from the carnal as a site of meaning, replacing body with book, feeling with reading, sensing with writing. As if the two could be separated. Already in Heidegger’s ontological hermeneutics, Dasein was stripped of its sexed, incarnate skin in the name of a quasi-transcendental discourse (Rede). Language as the destiny of Being
came to overshadow the embodied life of singular beings (relegated to the status of ontic
particulars). The temporality of understanding trumped the spatiality of flesh. And a subsequent veering from carnal experience was witnessed in the hermeneutic orientations of Gadamer and Ricoeur. A veering accentuated as hermeneutics increasingly engaged with structural linguistics and deconstruction. Textuality swallowed the body and turned it into écriture. But this did not mean that mainstream hermeneutics ceased to be phenomenological: Heidegger, Gadamer and Ricoeur constantly reminded us that what they were doing was hermeneutic phenomenology.
Granted. Yet there is no denying that the linguistic turn to the text was often construed as a turning away from the flesh—in practice if not in principle. And one of the main purposes of this volume is to suggest ways of undertaking a return journey. Ways which might help us recover the body as text and the text as body: to restore hermeneutics to phenomenology and vice versa, making explicit what was implicit all along. A step back to step forward.
What we are proposing therefore—at a moment when questions of matter, flesh, and body call out for new thinking—is to revisit the deep and inextricable relationship between sensation and interpretation. To show how both are, as Aristotle once noted, modes of hermeneutic mediation
(metaxu). Our wager in this volume is that such a move may help us better understand how we are constantly reading flesh, interpreting senses, and orienting bodies in passion and place even as we symbolize and dream. This is the task of carnal hermeneutics.
Discerning among Strangers
So we are concerned with a hermeneutics that goes all the way down. A mode of understanding that helps us diacritically
discern between diverse kinds of embodied beings. Reading between gaps. Discriminating and differentiating between selves and others—and others in ourselves. Such carnal hermeneutics has a crucial bearing, to cite an example we explored elsewhere, on how we sense
subtle distinctions between strangers who surprise us (the same term, hostis can mean guest or enemy).¹ The first act of civilization is wagering on whether to open the hand or reach for a weapon. Hostility or hospitality is at stake from the outset. What do we make of strangers that arrive out of the blue, walk in from the desert, and knock at our door in the middle of the night? And in this regard, carnal hermeneutics may be said to have two patron saints—the god Hermes and the dog Argos. For if Hermes, messenger of the gods, discloses hermetic cyphers from above, Argos brings animal savvy from below. The former, masked as a migrant, revealed himself to Baucis and Philomen as, arriving from nowhere, he tasted
their gift of food. The latter, Argos, deployed canine flair in recognizing his master, Odysseus, when he returned to Ithaca disguised as a beggar.² In both cases we witness fundamental forms of tact
in the discerning of strangers; and find a reminder that we often need animal or divine messengers to get us back in touch with ourselves.
What is true of Greek wisdom is equally true of biblical and other cultures. The inaugural act of Abrahamic discernment is, let us not forget, a scene of tasting
where Abraham and Sarah greet strangers from the desert at Mamre who—in sharing food—reveal themselves as divine and announce an impossible child, Isaac. The subsequent revelation of the name of Israel is through a mutual touching
of limbs between Yawveh and Jacob (the famous wrestling with the angel). And as John Panteleimon Manoussakis notes in this volume, Jesus came to earth to do two things: to taste and to touch. Both acts of carnal hermeneutics take place at the Last Supper and Emmaus; but they are already in evidence in multiple healings and epiphanies throughout the Gospels (the pasting of mud and saliva on the eyes of the blind man, the bleeding woman touching Jesus’s hem, Thomas touching Jesus’s wound, the washing of feet at the last supper).³ And this tradition of transformation through touch and taste—epitomized in hospitality of food and wine—continues down through western literature and art, inspiring such classic scenes as Monseigneur Myriel sharing his best cuisine with Jean Valjean in Les Misérables and the miraculous metamorphosis of bodies and minds in Karen Blixen’s Babette’s Feast.
Nor should we forget the rich testimony of non-Western traditions in this regard. Let us recall, for example, how one of the most revered forms of address for Brahman, in the Vedantin tradition, was Anna (food). And how the Buddha, when challenged by Mara to reveal by what authority he spoke of suffering, simply touched the ground. His finger touched earth and he felt the sensation of breath. Enlightenment followed.⁴
In short, carnal hermeneutics covers a wide spectrum of sense, both sacred and profane, as it ranges up and down—in ascending and descending spirals—from the most elevated cyphers of the divine to the lowest probings of tooth and claw. From Gods to dogs and back again. While hands reach up, feet reach down. But the point is that no matter how high or low experience goes, it still makes sense. Flesh sounds, filters, scents. Between the extremes of hyper rationalism at one end, and blind irrationalism at the other, we find the all too human path of carnal hermeneutics. A middle way. A road less traveled philosophically to be sure. But one that needs to be taken again and again.
It is a journey for which, fortunately, we have wise guides—as we hope to show in what follows in this essay, and in the other essays of this volume.
The First Breakthrough: Aristotle on Flesh as Medium
The philosophical discovery of carnal hermeneutics did not have to wait for the twentieth century. There were significant early intimations, starting with Aristotle. In the second book of the De Anima, Aristotle already acknowledged the enigmatic role of touch in his analysis of the five senses. It is a notoriously difficult and dense passage, but its implications are revolutionary—if largely overlooked for two thousand years. I offer some preliminary reflections on this text here before going on in Enigmas of Flesh
(in the following section) to chart a summary hermeneutics of flesh from Husserl to Ricoeur. My aim throughout is to show how carnal phenomenology is intimately and ultimately carnal hermeneutics.
In the concluding sections of De Anima, Book II, Aristotle makes the bold claim that touch is a discriminating sense.⁵ Against the common view that touch and taste are the lowest sensations—because unmediated—he responds that these traditionally underestimated senses have their own indispensable form of mediation.
With respect to touch, flesh (sarx) is the medium (metaxu) which gives us space to discern between different kinds of experience—hot and cold, soft and hard, attractive and unattractive.⁶ Or as Aristotle puts it, touch has many differences.
⁷ In touch, we are both touching and touched at the same time, but we do not dissolve into sensuous sameness. Proximity is not immediacy. Difference is preserved. "Flesh is a medium, not an organ."⁸ And this breakthrough insight means that flesh always harbors a certain distance or interval through which touch navigates. Touch is not fusion but mediation through flesh.
Unlike Plato, who denigrated touch and taste as unmediated senses, helpless before the flux of things, and contrary to materialists who claimed touch brings us into immediate contact with material stuff, Aristotle insists on the mediating character of tactility. To be tactile is to be exposed to otherness across gaps, to negotiate sensitively between other embodied beings, to respond to solicitations, to orient oneself. From the beginning, contact always involves an element of tact.
Aristotle places human perfection in the perfection of touch. Why? Because without touch there is no life. All living beings possess touch; which is why it is the most universal of the senses.⁹ And precisely as the most basic and encompassing of sensations, it expresses the general sensitivity
of flesh. But the most basic here does not mean the most transparent. In fact, touch turns out to be the most complex and elusive sense (which is perhaps why Aristotle places it at the end of his analysis of the senses in De Anima, Book II rather than at the beginning where one might expect to find it). Touch covers up its own medium and it is nigh impossible, admits Aristotle, to actually locate the organ of touch. Touch is present throughout the flesh without any immediately assignable organ.
¹⁰
But if touch is enigmatic, it is also keenly intelligent. For it is the sense which makes us most sensitive
to the world and to others, bringing us into contact with things greater than ourselves and thus putting us in question. To learn to touch well is to learn to live well, that is, tactfully. The being to whom logos has been given as his share is a tactile being, endowed with the finest tact.
¹¹ And this is not just in the realm of the tangible, but potentially in all matters of seeing, hearing, tasting, and smelling. For touch crosses all the senses. Its universal presence throughout our entire corporeal experience is what keeps us perpetually in touch with things refusing to allow any sensation to withdraw into itself or close itself off from others. Touch keeps us open to the world—even in sleep (where bodies still breathe and respond to noise or temperature)! Like Hermes it is forever moving and messaging between inside and outside, self and other, human and more than human. Tactility is a medium of transition and transmission. It is always on.
Let us try to unpack some of these inaugural claims. While I may seem to be immediately present to what I touch and to be immediately touched by what I touch—unlike sight, where I am not necessarily seen by what I see, or hearing, where I am not necessarily heard by what I hear, etc.—there is always something mediate in the ostensibly immediate, something far
in the near.
In other words, there is sensing in sense, a making sense and receiving sense from someone or something other than myself. Flesh mediates this otherness, crossing back and forth between self and strangeness. And this is where hermeneutics begins. What Heidegger calls the hermeneutic as-structure
is already operative in our most basic sensations. For since all the senses, as noted, involve touch, and since touch involves mediation, all our sensations involve interpretation (albeit in the primal sense of orientation prior to theoretical understanding).¹² This is so even when such omnipresent tactile hermeneutics hides itself, functioning as a carnal medium we see through (diaphanein) but do not see. Flesh mediates unbeknownst to us, remaining for Aristotle an enigma describable only in images—e.g., watery membrane, air envelope, slim veil, or second skin. When we try to grasp the medium of touch we find only metaphors in our hands. Flesh is figural from first to last. Literal is figurative. In touching the world we are constantly prefiguring, refiguring, and configuring our experience.
But if touch is something we do to the world, it is also something the world does to us. It works both ways. Touch is what first affects us, and does so in the most concrete, singular ways. From the beginning, flesh is charged with issues of attraction and retraction. When the child moves to the touch of its mother or opens its mouth to feed from the breast it is already orienting and interpreting. It is not merely reacting to a stimulus but responding to a call. In the natal contact of flesh on flesh, there are already tiny seizures and exposures of joy and fear, desire and anxiety. With the separation of birth, the mouth ceases to be a buccal cavity and becomes an oral medium.¹³ The first cry is a call responding to a call. Or summoning a response. A reaching across distance, a leap over a gap or caesura between self and other. So the first touch is not neutral but already a reading between the lines—of skin and bone, of soft and hard, of hot and cold, of far and near. Or to anticipate the terms of modern phenomenology, we might say that flesh is not a thing—qua object or organ—but a no-thing (like Heidegger’s Dasein or Sartre’s for-itself) which makes sense of things. It involves a highly sensitive carnal Befindlichkeit which evaluates