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James Kugel on Post Torah Judaism

by Ben Atlas on 03.13.2010.12:02pm · 0 comments

Quint Buchholz, Mann mit Spazierstock

James Kugel responded to the reviews of his book in the Jewish Quarterly and it’s starting to pick up the blogosphere buzz. Without the benefit of actually reading the JQR one can imperfectly gleam the objections from Kugel’s own polemic, specifically his virtual debate with Professor Benjamin Sommer.

James Kugel observes the conflict of a believer and a biblical scholar. On one hand one is compelled to accept the “four or more anonymous authors, all of whom lived long after the time of Moses”. On the hand there is a rhetoric to infuse the different authors with a divine origin and inspiration, as Kugel quotes Benjamin Sommer: “There is no contradiction between the austere God of P and the immanent God of J;there is no contradiction between the way P describes the miracle at the Reed Sea in a naturalistic way while J describes it in a supernatural way.”

James Kugel is basically saying that the search for the divine origin in Torah is a waste of time, it’s a hodgepodge. But then he proposes something even more radical: “These texts started out as one thing (etiological narratives, royal propaganda, divine instructions to the king, and cultic recitations) and then, thanks to the great Interpretive Revolution of the closing centuries BCE, they became something else entirely (moral tales, historical fact, timeless truths offered to all Israel, and the heartfelt psalms of King David).” To be sure Professor Kugel maintains there is a succession of the Interpretive Revolutions all the way to the Rabbinic Judaism. That process or re-imagining the texts is “divine” enough for James Kugel to the point of him basing his own Orthodoxy on this very proposition.

Is this argument not as contradictory that of Benjamin Sommer? In fact by the way of a pertinent detour there are letters that James Kugel published on this web site, comments about his book. Scroll in the middle there is a letter from some DH, Orthoprax or Orthodox, read it. Can James Kugel accuse anyone of being conflicted, inconsistent or contradictory?

But let me mine some value here. All these scholars don’t care about the truth, they toss in just enough demagoguery to explain the conflicts of their dubious practices and the tribal standings. But yet there is some geshmak to be found in their own unrestrained “interpretive revolutions”, firm and toned mental gymnastics, like this one:

“Let’s look at the one case that Sommer does examine in detail, the insertion of the Judah-Tamar episode in the middle of the Joseph story. Both narratives, Judah-Tamar and at least some parts of the Joseph story, come from “J.” Sommer notes – so obviously they were meant to go together (p. 160). I suppose that argument would have more force if “J” were indeed one person. But nobody (except possibly the late Gerhard von Rad) really maintains that – indeed, the whole Tendenz of recent European Pentateuchal studies has been, to quote the title of a 2006 collection of essays, A Farewell to the Yahwist. Even Wellhausen insisted that “J” was really a collection of different writers, J1, J2, J3, and so forth, and Rolf Rendtorff, H. H. Schmid and others subsequently made the same case in great detail. So drop that argument – it was false to begin with. And come to think of it, why shouldn’t Sommer want to consider the Judah-Tamar episode an interpolation?

Surely he subscribes to some form of the Documentary Hypothesis, nor, therefore, does he likely have any objection in principle to identifying Judah-Tamar as an interpolation.

What is more, this episode clearly announces itself as such, starting as it does with that all-purpose editorial transition, “At this same time…” and ending with a staple of nearly all insertions, the resumptive repetition (Wiederaufnahme), found here in Gen. 39:1, “Now [as I was saying,] Joseph had been brought down to Egypt.” The Judah-Tamar narrative further identifies itself as an interpolation by its disjunction from the surrounding story of Joseph, most notably in its picture of Judah, who is here an at least middle-aged paterfamilias with three grown sons, indeed, a grandfather by the end of the story, whereas much later in the Joseph story, Reuben, the oldest brother, can say to his father, “You may kill my two sons if I do not bring him [Benjamin] back to you” (Gen. 42:37). It certainly sounds as if he is talking about two minor children, not mature adults with a will of their own. If so, how can Reuben’s younger brother Judah have been the father of grown, married sons still earlier? (Not impossible, surely, but a rather unlikely detail for the unitary author “J” to have stuck in.) The Judah of the Judah-Tamar episode also seems to be a rather different character from the Judah who appears in the chapters that follow it. The former is a loutish bully who is prepared to condemn his daughter-in-law to death despite the reasonable inference that it was his own cruel prevention of her marrying that led her in desperation to an extramarital pregnancy. By contrast, the Judah of the Joseph story is the moral hero of the entire affair, a man prepared to sacrifice his own welfare in order to allow his brother Benjamin to go free. As many have argued, the only reason for Judah-Tamar’s insertion into the Joseph narrative was that it preserved an ancient tradition concerning the ancestry of two allegedly Judahite clans, Perez and Zerah. And if it was inserted where it was, this was simply because there was no other place to put it: it could not come after the Joseph story, at the end of which Judah and his brothers have all immigrated to Egypt, because the events of Judah-Tamar takes place when Judah is still living in the land of Israel; and to put the story before the Joseph narrative would only compound the problem of Judah’s middle-aged persona in Judah-Tamar. It had to be inserted somewhere in the middle.”

It would be nice to farbreng one day with all the Js, the original bloggers. You see the anonymity is the root cause of all the evil in the world. If they signed their darn “trees of life” the world would have been different, better.

P.S. Wait, what’s going down here? So the reason for the insertion of the Judah-Tamar story was the need to establish the Judean family tree of non other than the future (or is it past?) King David himself and by extension every serious messianic contender known to man and the only thing they came up with is the incestuous, random fling with a whore? Wow! Even if this was true, given the editorial control, they would have kept it all in the family rather than deliberately mess up the story line?

Here what really happen. Some nerd going by the name J7 was sitting doing what he or she usually does on a Thursday afternoon, writing Humash that is. Suddenly several Judean rich goons showed up to make sure J7 spins something nice about their families. It was then that J7 remembered when his was a kid schlepping around his scrolls, the bullies would kick him, spill his ink and draw obscene pictures on the back of his scrolls. Now was his chance to get even. J7 wrote the worst lurid tale he can think of, knowing too well that the illiterate shepherds from the Perez and Zerah families would never find out. And the rest like they say is history.

The Blog Delusion

by Ben Atlas on 03.8.2010.7:55pm · 4 comments

Blogging is peculiar delusion based on the strange expectation that there are more people in the virtual world who understand you compared to the real world. It’s hard to find a more prefect mental distortion.

The Internet culture is in crisis. Jewish blogs are stuck. A dignified livelihood is a challenge. Why? In one sentence, when a culture becomes derivative, it mines and depletes its own legacy. I started thinking about this topic when I read this paragraph in Jaron Lanier’s new book:

“It is astonishing how much of the chatter online is driven by fan responses to expression that was originally created within the sphere of old media and that is now being destroyed by the net. Comments about TV shows, major movies, commercial music releases, and video games must be responsible for almost as much bit traffic as porn. There is certainly nothing wrong with that, but since the web is killing the old media, we face a situation in which culture is effectively eating its own seed stock.”

Marshall McLuhan declared that “medium is the message”. What he meant was that a new form of expression, i.e. alphabet, writing, print, TV, etc., changes our brain wiring, tastes and values so radically that medium itself is the central cultural event. Inevitably at a dawn of every novel form of expression, a new medium is awkwardly used to reprocess the old, the bleak task comparable to translating poetry into a foreign language. This is the DJ stage where the Internet finds itself at the current moment. The old tunes are remixed, republished, relinked to a new beat, literally and figuratively no new music is created. Occasionally a new app is written for the legacy proprietary code instead of a new OS.

On to the Jews cursed with the satirical task of amplifying a culture. Every potential convert to Judaism needs to be aware of these axioms:

  1. Marshall McLuhan spoke about the “rear view mirror” phenomena or the propensity of any culture to live in a utopia about its past. Jews amplify this tendency in the worst possible way. Most traditional Jewish communities are consumed with intense utopia and the deliberate subterfuge of history.
  2. A Rabbi is a DJ, never singing in its own voice and forever spinning someone else’s tracks. There is a derivative throwback tendency in every culture but again amplified by the Jews. The tribe castigated to the two thousand years of the survivalist epic. With the rare exceptions (i.e. kabbalah) the innovation is shut down, conformism is bred and encouraged. People who can’t contain or control their creative impulses are eventually expelled from the traditional Jewish communities.
  3. Every group on the face of the earth is defined by what this group is not. Jaron Lanier calls this the “mob switch”. Once again this is most sensitive component of the traditional Jewish culture. Although the potential converts are not specifically instructed about the importance of the boundary defining hate, eventually to successfully integrate in the communities they would have to internalize the intense feeling of hatred towards other Jewish groups and denominations, towards the declared heretics, goyim, real and imaginary antisemites, etc.

Now let’s compare the three “Jewish problems” to the Internet. The Internet is definitely not a utopian vision of the past. There is strong revolutionary current, especially in the communal rhetoric of the Open Source movement and the Web 2.0 social. Alas, after a decade, a new server side oligarchy emerged to control the scalable bits. Instead of empowering creativity, no longer under a centralized command, there is a deliberate and impoverishing push for the “free”, the collapse of the copyright boundaries, devaluation of the original unpaid authorship under the assault the ad supported aggregators. The DJ culture is absolutely the internet as we know it today. The disastrous anonymous comments culture and the combustible flame wars take the group/mob hate to the unprecedented levels on the Internet.

And  what about the Wall St.? The financial services industry dominated by the derivative contracts became the most important part of the American GDP. There is an easy analogy to the Internet (or any derivatives dominated culture). People often complain that the stocks are the trading instruments removed from the real value of a company. An options contract or a credit default swap contract is like a tweet about a comment on a blog post that links to a different newspaper web site. Derivatives are comments removed from a productive culture, they don’t innovate, don’t create value and eventually pop. To slap a Dell label on a product engineered and fabricated in China is like linking to someone else’s content on a popular web site. Our religions, our ability to make a living and our “internet economy”, the trifecta, is overrun by the derivative thinking. We can no longer extract value from comments about the dried up wells and we can no longer destroy the remaining functioning artisan wells. We can no longer condemn people to the indignity of being replaced by the machines or the outsourced slaves. We can’t DJ, quote, link, mashup or re-aggregate our way from this crisis. You can quote me on that.

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Two events last week should put all users of Google services on notice. First was the so called “Musicblogocide” as described in the Guardian – Google shuts down music blogs without warning, as years of archives are wiped off the internet. We have seen before similar actions from Google and this one seem to fit the pattern. Google denies service in a somewhat arbitrary fashion, there is usually no warning and most importantly there is virtually no recourse, no innocent until proven guilty, no reasonable possibility to appeal or appease the lawyered up machine.

Similarly on the same week Google announced that they are discontinuing FTP service to the Blogger blogs, a serious disruption to thousands of users. Google’s excuse is that they are spending too much on the resources for the FTP based blogs is laughable. But back to the Musicblogocide.

There is a vast problem on the Internet with the copyright, especially as it relates to music but not only music. Google itself contributes to the ambiguity on this issue if not pushes people away from the admittedly digitally outdated copyright interpretations. The Google Internet as it exist today leads people in a certain direction. Specifically the Internet is viewed as an advertising page inventory with the following dire consequences:

  • Quantity trumps quality, keywords trump coherent sentences. This leads to millions of Splogs and the entire Affiliate Marketing industry.
  • Original authorship is diluted, share alike and mashups culture is encouraged. This leads to the proliferation of the aggregators (borderline Splogs really).
  • The common “share alike” practices encourage republishing or even outright stealing of content (the borders are blurred again).
  • There is still no micro payment system to deliver any value to the content originators, the so called “creative class”. You don’t have to look far to see the result of this, even in the current great recession.

Google is in the unique position to change this poisonous climate. But there is an impression that all they care about in the end is the display ads inventory. Today Google presides over the Internet that is anti authorship and anti intellectual property. But instead of tackling the root causes of this decrepit culture Google prefers to pick on the bloggers who only blindly follow where the system created and blessed by Google leads them. One way to solve this is to create a micro payment app to drive the value to the writers and the artists. You want to embed anything, pay the micro price. Shift the value proposition on the Internet from the DJs to the creators and composers. And don’t blame the DJs for the direction you Google yourself googled for them.

The Death of the Big Blog Dream?

by Ben Atlas on 02.9.2010.10:53am · 0 comments

Bill Wasik makes some interesting observations in response to Nick Carr and George Packer, yet unlike Jaron Lanier Bill just diagnosed the symptoms, not the disease. Bill Wasik writes in Twitter and the Big Blog Dream:

“When people talk about how the Internet is killing the mainstream media, they’re really thinking about blogs, specifically blogs circa 2004. The sudden rise of blogs held out a tantalizing vision of the future, where amateurs would reliably attract an audience to rival that of the mass media. In the Big Blog Dream, there would still be a single media conversation, as it were, but there would be a leveling in that conversation whereby amateurs could join, often as quasi-equals, alongside the professionals.

This is the storyline that still basically dominates discussion of the Internet — and yet the Big Blog Dream has largely died. First, the mainstream media muscled in on it, using their storehouses of experience and talent to launch scores of their own high-traffic blogs. (Where they didn’t build their own, they hired the best amateurs to join their staffs.) Second, the Internet-native media that did survive are now hardly amateur by any definition: they’re places like TPM, Gawker, and the Huffington Post, that have built bare-bones business models that create tons of original content by leveraging young and/or unpaid/low-paid writers. And third, between these two groups (the big-media blogs and the Internet-native blogs), most of the readers no longer have the time or inclination to bother with any actual amateurs. Really, for the past three years or so, there’s been almost no hope for new bloggers who don’t quickly find their way underneath the umbrella of some established site. And so blogging (at least among the non-elderly, as Nick Carr recently pointed out) has come to seem far less vital.”

Everything Bill writes in the preceding paragraphs is true, but this is one of the effects, not the cause, specifically not the cause of the decline in journalism. Google is the God of the Internet. Whats is written on the internet is done to worship and please the Deity. The Google ethos is advertising and this has the far-reaching consequences. Google needs to maximized the inventory of pages to display the ads. The model is the incremental small display ads payments spread over millions of pages. The online content only gravitates in the direction where the monetization model leads it. Hence if you take the Huffington Post (and Gawker for sure) you will find that the quantity trumps quality. Certainly at some point the Huffington Post had the high brow aspirations and there is still plenty of decent content there but overall they moved in the direction where the monetization model leads them, namely a heavy dose of aggregation and the general style of news DJing, instead of the expensive investigative reporting.

The other aspect of the Google worship is that people start writing for a bot, not a human. A computer naturally favors words over coherent sentences. Enter the spam plague of the “affiliate marking”. A “cut & paste” article about a washing machine is more valuable for a bot than a Shakespeare’s sonnet. This encourages the wanton plagiarizing, the mash-ups and devalues an individual authorship. To make matters worse, the anonymity built-in the blog comments by design, degrades the online conversation, even leads to the raging mob and hate. And only then came the Facebook and the Twitter to finish off what was left of the intelligible conversation. So blogs didn’t kill the journalism but the underlying internet advertising monetization model did kill both the traditional journalism and the blogs.

The Decline of Blogging and Commenting

by Ben Atlas on 02.9.2010.9:09am · 0 comments

Nick Carr puts an exclamation point on the Pew Study, he writes Blogging: a great pastime for the elderly:

“…blogging is now the uncoolest thing you can do on the Internet. It’s even uncooler than editing Wikipedia articles or having a Second Life avatar. In 2006, 28% of teens were blogging. Now, just three years later, the percentage has tumbled to 14%. Among twentysomethings, the percentage who write blogs has fallen from 24% to 15%. Writing comments on blogs is also down sharply among the young. It’s only geezers – those over 30 – who are doing more blogging than they used to.”

There are structural problems with blogging namely the value of authorship, the cut and paste aggregators pretending to be blogs, the mob rule of the anonymous comments, most importantly the decline of value due to the faulty monetization models that favor quantity over quality.  But certainly teens are not spending less time online, instead they preoccupy themselves with the Facebook statusphere and that is a horrible place to publish, relate or express individuality within a prison-like, predetermined grid (do listen to Jaron Lanier on this). People often say that we now read less, but we know that actually we read more syllables all the time, the question is what are we reading instead or in addition to.

A Virtual Community is an Oxymoron

by Ben Atlas on 02.5.2010.10:30am · 0 comments

Every single thriving online forum is an outlet of a community or an interest that already exists off-line. People who like a certain team, etc. naturally extend the actual interest, a hobby into a virtual community. So the online forums are the reflections of the ideological, religious or national tribes. Online forums complement a niche but they never create a niche (some idiots who claim there are no communities online, they are blind to the fact that online communities only mirror real social and ideological groups).

The cutting edge ideas or the proverbial out of the box thinking gets little traction on the internet. People seek distraction and confirmation not an intellectual disturbance (I wrote about this in The Tension and Pretension of Blogging). This is by the way why I turned off the comments. I reflect about the eclectic mix that has no real life base and is not narrow enough to generate an uber abstract, pointless chatter. But the bottom line is that the people who imagine that they can reverse engineer a community from online into real life, they are delusional liers.

The Internet Infographic

by Ben Atlas on 02.2.2010.11:44pm · 0 comments

This blog is one year old, so what’s doing in the internet neighborhood? ►►►read more

Horizontal Hold Shelf

by Ben Atlas on 01.30.2010.11:23am · 0 comments

I am keeping an eye on the new group blog by ex Chasidim appropriately titled “Unpious” (“Unchosen” already taken by Hella). I know some of the authors, amongst them the veteran bloggers, even pioneers of the medium. It looks like the blog is moving in the direction I have been advocating forever, namely the emphasis on the original literally content instead of the abominable “cut & paste”. If they can only drop the anonymity, it would be a perfectly promising start. I sincerely wish them much success. Here is a sample poem about Williamsburg – Hello Darkness, My Old Friend.

Jaron Lanier on ‘Persistent Somnolence’

by Ben Atlas on 01.17.2010.1:14am · 0 comments

NYT on Jaron’s new book – A Rebel in Cyberspace, Fighting Collectivism:

“Decisions made in the formative years of computer networking, for instance, promoted online anonymity, and over the years, as millions upon millions of people began using the Web, Mr. Lanier says, anonymity has helped enable the dark side of human nature. Nasty, anonymous attacks on individuals and institutions have flourished, and what Mr. Lanier calls a “culture of sadism” has gone mainstream.”

The point about books deserves a special attention:

“An impenetrable tone deafness rules Silicon Valley when it comes to the idea of authorship, he writes, recalling the Wired editor Kevin Kelly’s 2006 prediction that the mass scanning of books would one day create a universal library in which no book would be an island — in effect, one humongous text, made searchable and remixable on the Web… Google and other companies are scanning library books into the cloud in a massive Manhattan Project of cultural digitization. What happens next is what’s important. If the books in the cloud are accessed via user interfaces that encourage mashups of fragments that obscure the context and authorship of each fragment, there will be only one book. This is what happens today with a lot of content; often you don’t know where a quoted fragment from a news story came from, who wrote a comment, or who shot a video.”

This why the anonymous culture is such a natural fit for religious Jews. After all the systematic subversion and obfuscation of authorship is the fundamental principal of the Judaic literary legacy. Even when there is a b’shem omro authorship footnote available, it’s still a part of the mashup called Torah. Jews are known as “people of the book”. So the digital horror described by Jaron Lanier is a part and the hyperlinked parcel of the entire Jewish doctrinal tradition and it gravitates towards its natural ecosystem online.

We all know that search engines archive a version of any web page and a cached version of  a web page is available with the typical search results. But what if you don’t want your page archived (not to be confused with the indexed URLs)? This is my preference since I often update and tweak posts, even the old posts. I don’t want the archived version to remain even after I decide to delete a post. The solution is to add a “noarchive” meta tag. Add the following text into the header of your web site:

<meta name=”robots” content=”noarchive”>

The result is that if you do a search on my blog pages for example, there is no cached version for any of the pages. And provided you have a backup routine in place, you shouldn’t rely on the archive for a backup. Google talks about this under “removal of a cached page”.

DJ Shmarya

by Ben Atlas on 01.12.2010.11:57am · 0 comments

Shmarya Rosenberg in the FM War Room. Ben Garvin for The New York Times

I used to get upset when people compared my blog to Shmarya’s but then I realized that these are the very people who think that since the New York Times and the New York Post are sold on the same street corner, they both must be newspapers.

Just few years ago I was berated for merely linking to his blog and last week, surprisingly the nasal and monotonous radio host Zev Brenner gave Shmarya a microphone of the most listened to radio program in the post-holocaust metropolis. Ma nishtana? Behold, “Change has come to America”. Oh, yes Shmarya was in the New York Times. And here is the ironic paradox, the market where Zev Brenner sells his radio signal negates the popular culture and at the same time is defined and validated by the popular culture. So literally if you are in the hated mass media, than you exist and visa versa.

But there is more. Why there is no good music today? Why create when you can mix? It’s a DJ culture, get yourself a spin table and mix away.  A perfect Web 2.0 set up for Judaism. Two thousand years of hyperlinked quotes about quotes. Your value is commensurate with your command of the quotes and the spin, not your own prose or opinions, not even your unauthorized dialogues with God himself, God forbid.

I once asked Shmarya about his competitors, who are they? “VIN” – answered Shmarya without hesitation. Indeed Shmarya copies the entire articles for the same reason VIN does. The actual newspapers where the articles originate are treif and that includes the very NY Times that gives Shmarya the legitimacy and pays the journalist to actually write and investigate ready to cut and paste articles. Indeed if you strip VIN and the Failed Messiah of the “focus”, it’s the same readership and the same link fest. Steal articles wholesale, DJ news. The ideological differences between VIN and FM are incidental but the readership is the same, the same derivative DJ culture of link and spin, the same toxic morass of anonymity.

Yet Shmarya deserves the credit for his maniac perseverance, for putting up with the death threats, the horrible fundamentalists nastiness, the rejection by the commissars and apparatchiks. In life it’s all about the persistent perseverance and I sincerely wish that Shmarya sees a glimmer of happiness, he deserves this above all. And the very people who object to his blog could have killed the “creativity” with love long time ago, but what would they read instead?