A Radical Jew: Paul and the Politics of Identity

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University of California Press, Oct 14, 1994 - Religion - 400 pages
Daniel Boyarin turns to the Epistles of Paul as the spiritual autobiography of a first-century Jewish cultural critic. What led Paul—in his dramatic conversion to Christianity—to such a radical critique of Jewish culture?

Paul's famous formulation, "There is neither Jew nor Greek, no male and female in Christ," demonstrates the genius of Christianity: its concern for all people. The genius of Judaism is its validation of genealogy and cultural, ethnic difference. But the evils of these two thought systems are the obverse of their geniuses: Christianity has threatened to coerce universality, while ethnic difference is one of the most troubled issues in modern history.

Boyarin posits a "diaspora identity" as a way to negotiate the pitfalls inherent in either position. Jewishness disrupts categories of identity because it is not national, genealogical, or even religious, but all of these, in dialectical tension with one another. It is analogous with gender: gender identity makes us different in some ways but not in others.

An exploration of these tensions in the Pauline corpus, argues Boyarin, will lead us to a richer appreciation of our own cultural quandaries as male and female, gay and straight, Jew and Palestinian—and as human beings.

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Contents

Wrestling with Paul
1
Circumcision Allegory and Universal Man
13
What Was Wrong with Judaism? The Cultural Politics of Pauline Scholarship
39
The Spirit and the Flesh Pauls Politico Anthropology
57
Moses Veil or The Jewish Letter the Christian Spirit
86
Circumcision and Revelation or The Politics of the Spirit
106
Was Paul an AntiSemite?
136
Brides of Christ Jewishness and the Pauline Origins of Christian Sexual Renunciation
158
There Is No Male and Female Gdadans and Gender Trouble
180
Paul the Jewish Problem and the Woman Question
201
Answering the Mail Toward a Radical Jewishness
228
Notes
261
Bibliography
339
Index
359
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About the author (1994)

Daniel Boyarin is Taubman Professor of Talmudic Culture at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of Carnal Israel: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (California, 1993).

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