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Genesis Gets the Crumb Treatment

by: Kelpie Wilson, t r u t h o u t | Book Review

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(Book Cover: Robert Crumb / W. W. Norton & Co.)

    I confess that I am one of those feminists who finds a lot to like in the work of Robert Crumb. If his early work in the underground comics movement expressed a "sexual rage" as he calls it, well those were the times to get it all out of your system. Besides, how could I not love an artist so appreciative of the real bodies that women have - big butts, thunder thighs and all?

    

     So, it came as a surprise to learn that this warrior of the id and defender of the flesh has produced an illustrated version of Genesis. That's right, the Bible. What would he do with it? Obviously, Crumb would portray the cruel and jealous God of the Old Testament as some version of the cynical, abusive Mr. Natural, holding secret orgies in Heaven with Devil Girl, and he would base his Abraham on Flakey Foont, Mr. Natural's pathetic sycophant.

     But that's not how Crumb did it. On this one, he played it (mostly) straight. And why not? If you have never read Genesis from start to finish, you might not be aware that the stories are as full of sexual perversity and surreal plot points as any comic book. Genesis has lust, inebriation, nudity, polygamy, harlots, men pimping their wives, masturbation, penis cutting, sex with a 90-year-old woman who gives birth, sodomy, incest and a father who offers his virgin daughters up for strangers to rape.

     That's a lot of great material for an artist like Crumb, and the genius of his Genesis is that he portrays it all - every word and every illustration is given equal weight. That's not how they taught it to us back in Sunday school. Our Bible coloring books had only selected scenes: Noah and his animals, but never Noah lying passed out drunk and naked in his tent. And even when we outgrew the Sunday school cookies and punch and graduated to wafers and wine, we still never heard about Abraham selling his wife Sarah to Pharaoh in exchange for cattle, gold and slaves. It was a kind of scam for the couple, and they did it more than once, targeting King Abimelech of Gerar next and getting cattle, sheep, slaves and land in return.

     Crumb's compositions are cinematic and the rendering of detail is deliciously fine. One is amazed at how well the text adapts to the comic book form with its speech balloons and narrative boxes. The "sweet" Crumb comes through here with tenderly drawn and emotionally insightful expressions. And the faces! Where did he get them all? Each individual in the "begats" is unique. They are all raw, rich and human.

     Some years ago, when Bill Moyers convened an interfaith dialogue on Genesis, it was the human dimension of the stories that he found so gripping: "Because their emotions and struggles are so real," Moyers said, "the people of Genesis come to life in every generation, and their stories live on."

     Scholars have often said that the Hebrew texts are the first example of written history. Earlier writing from Sumeria recorded myths (including the flood story), genealogies, laws and accounts, but the Hebrews were the first to write a narrative history of their people. Before the "people of the book," the common culture of a clan or tribe was formed exclusively by oral tales and images.

     Images are fundamentally different from words. Leonard Shlain, in his book "The Alphabet Versus the Goddess," lays out a theory about this difference and the impact it has had on cultural evolution. Shlain thought that writing stimulated left brain, linear, cause-and-effect thinking, associated with males, while a focus on images produced a more intuitive and holistic style of thought, associated with females.

     The "people of the book" crusaded against images, as their God warned them away from the "alien gods" of other people. The most interesting scenes in Genesis revolve around the struggles within the tribe of Abraham over images and other vestiges of goddess worship, for clearly these stories are about a people in transition. And this is where Crumb's work becomes important.

     By rendering every letter of Genesis faithfully into images, Crumb has given us a blank canvas on which to color new meaning. Combining words and images together allows us to escape the fundamentalism of either one alone. Shlain discusses this fundamentalism in his chapters on the Protestant Reformation in 16th century Europe. The Catholic Church had never allowed free access to the Bible texts. Only ordained priests were authorized to read and interpret the Bible for congregations. The only direct access people had to the stories was the depiction of selected stories in church windows and other decorations. Then along came the printing press, making the Bible available to lay people, and Martin Luther declared "every man is his own priest." But liberating the Bible from church control courted chaos, and there was suddenly no room for any interpretation at all. Bible literalism was born. And since no one really knew how to respond to incidents like Abraham selling Sarah to Pharaoh, or Lot offering his virgin daughters to a ravenous mob, those stories are generally ignored by all.

     Crumb's Genesis does not let you ignore the problem stories - they are imaged just as faithfully as all the others.

     Crumb addresses some of these more puzzling stories in his afterword commentary where he quotes from a book by Near East scholar Savina Teubal titled "Sarah the Priestess." I read Teubal's book as background material for my novel "Primal Tears" a few years ago and it revolutionized my thinking about human history. Teubal found it very likely that the biblical Sarah was a high priestess from a disappearing matriarchal culture that still existed in Mesopotamia, alongside an emerging patriarchy.

     Ancient Mesopotamian priestesses were highly regarded and their offices were essential to the functioning of society. The priestess was responsible for rituals maintaining the fertility of the land and for decisions on how the stores of grain would be shared. To maintain her impartiality, a priestess was not allowed to bear children of her own, lest she favor her own lineage. Hence all the barren women among the matriarchs of Genesis - they were priestesses in a new land where their ancient prerogatives were being revoked, systematically, by Yahweh.

     The heiros gamos, or sacred marriage, was the supreme fertility ritual performed by a priestess with a king. As the priestess embodied Inanna, Queen of Heaven, she would "take the earth-king into the sweetness of her holy loins, and by her cosmic powers ensure the king's powers of leadership and fertility." This explains the two episodes with Sarah and the kings and another one later between Sarah's daughter-in-law Rebekah and a king. Sarah's first liaison with Pharaoh brings down plague and God makes sure that the second of Sarah's sacred marriages, with King Abimelech, is never consummated. Even the threat of it has made all the women in the kingdom barren and God only restores their fertility after Abimelech sends Sarah back to her husband.

     And yet, the repudiation of matriarchal power is not complete. Although multiplying Abraham's seed is the driving thrust of the Genesis story, only the descendents of Sarah's child Isaac are counted among the twelve tribes of Israel. Even God backs Sarah up when he lets her banish Abraham's son Ishmael.

     It is interesting also that the patriarchs are not the manliest of men. Abraham always does as he is told. Isaac is too weak to resist Rebekah, who deceives him into blessing the mild-mannered Jacob rather than the robust hunter Esau. Jacob is a "dweller in tents" who cannot control his rowdy sons. Joseph, as Crumb says, "is a sensitive man who is moved to tears many times in his life story." Sensitive men and strong matriarchs are one phase of a gender struggle that is endlessly fascinating to us as a species, a struggle that has always been with us (see Crumb's story "Cave Wimp").

     Armed with interpretations like Savina Teubal's and with Crumb's accessible picture book, a new territory of exploration awaits the reader. One point that deserves a lot of thought is how the history of one obscure tribe has come to dominate religious practice for thousands of years and what that means for the future.

     For instance, if the "chosen people" of Israel believe they have a God-given right to the already-occupied land of Canaan, how can there ever be peace in the Middle East? Genesis has many passages that justify the subjugation of the Canaanites, beginning with Noah banishing his son Ham on the flimsiest of excuses (that he saw his father drunk and naked in his tent?). As Ham and his young son Canaan depart, Noah calls after them, "Cursed be Canaan! The lowliest of slaves he shall be to his brother!" This has the feel of a crude setup for all the smiting that comes later.

     No doubt, there has been more than one group of nomads with big ambitions who trolled the earth, searching for opportunities to multiply their seed. The Hebrews were merely the first to write their story and preserve it for generations and so they earned their influence. Because of this continuing influence, passed down to both Christians and Muslims, it is vitally important that these stories do not go unexamined. As Bill Moyers put it: "The more each of us knows and understands, the better our chances for living purposeful lives, creating strong families, building solid communities, and forging a more tolerant and vibrant democracy ... together."

  

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Kelpie Wilson is the author of "Primal Tears," a novel. You can contact her through her web site at www.kelpiewilson.com.

Comments

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Overlooked: creation's

Overlooked: creation's progress, chronology of creatures/man's improvements, the last-thereby most perfect creation->woman.

It was an interesting

It was an interesting article until you got into your digs about Israel.

Very interesting

Very interesting presentation, both by Crumb, who has evidently depicted Genesis in an unusually vibrant, all-encompassing way, as well as by Kelpie Wilson, who has brought to the fore a unique understanding of the feminine, as it silently but pervasively permeated the biblical tales stemming from that historical epoch.

Interesting article.

Interesting article. Thanks. You say: > Then along came the printing press, making the Bible available to lay people, and Martin Luther declared "every man is his own priest." But liberating the Bible from church control courted chaos, and there was suddenly no room for any interpretation at all. Bible literalism was born. But the Jews by then had Bible available for nearly 2000 years, and WIDE open to interpretation, and only minorly at risk for literalism. So clear mass access was not the key factor you suggest it is.

does crumb's review of your

does crumb's review of your book have anything to do with this? i agree with the other reader, interesting, until... crumb read your book.

does this have anything to

does this have anything to do with crumb's review of your book? i agree with the other reader, interesting until... crumb read your book.

Brilliant essay. First I had

Brilliant essay. First I had to read it simply because it was about R. Crumb - an interesting documentary that introduced me to a wider appreciation of his art, and the coolness of it. But of course - I'll have to become "Armed with interpretations like Savina Teubal's and with Crumb's accessible picture book," to delve into a new paradigm about Genesis... can't wait. Snap back to reality and look at Canaan today... the people of the book have much to answer for.

Hard to believe but the OT

Hard to believe but the OT has more blood,sex and gore than all of Crumb's creations...

Just couldn't get past the

Just couldn't get past the Adam and Eve thing where the whole family is practicing incest.

I like this article/review

I like this article/review very much, including the "digs about Israel," which are apt. There's only one thing I would quarrel with, and that's the familiar formula that the Sumerians and other early peoples wrote down myths, while the Hebrews wrote history. Modern scholarship has thrown huge doubt on the story of the Exodus, so why should the even earlier stories in Genesis be deemed to be history? It seems more sensible to me to say that when the Hebrews started writing their history, about three millenia ago, they went back beyond what could reasonably be called history and included what we might fairly call "legend" as the beginnings of their work, but that they wrote up these legends in a "history-like" manner. Anyone care to comment?

If you're around Los

If you're around Los Angeles, the Hammer museum will be showing the ORIGINAL ARTWORK PAGES...from now for another few weeks. And you can get the book--and the rarer autographed version--at the R Crumb website for cheaper than elsewhere...along with other original artwork of his.

When I talk "bible" with

When I talk "bible" with others, I find most "religious" people have no idea what is actually written in Genesis. For instance, the nepahlim, giants born of the "sons of god"and daughters of men. Like everything else, people seem more concerned with "facts" to back up their ignorance than actually looking at the face of truth which may shed some light on narrow dogmatic beliefs.

Since I've only posted at

Since I've only posted at Truthout.org maybe a couple of times over ... years, I'll start by saying HELLO to regular readers. I came across the following interesting topic a couple of days ago, what archaeologists have to say about the Bible's texts and which is considerably (to say the least, I guess) different from "mainstream" beliefs. "King David was a nebbish And Exodus never happened and the walls of Jericho did not come a-tumbling down. How archaeologists are shaking Israel to its biblical foundations" by Laura Miller, Feb 7, 2001 http://archive.salon.com/books/feature/2001/02/07/solomon/index.html The above article is short, but it says some certainly interesting things, one of which is related to the book with the title I used for the Wikipedia page linked further below. The book's by "Israel Finkelstein, chairman of the Archaeology Department at Tel Aviv University," and "archaeology historian and journalist Neil Asher Silberman". Another professor of archaeology, an achaeologist anyway, at Tel Aviv U., Ze'ev Herzog, is also quoted in the above salon.com article. They provide welcome views or information of archaeological basis, which we can quickly see, when learning what these people say, is very important, or crucial, for old texts. The Old Testament appears to be the part that the archaeological researchers evidently do especially focus on when it comes to the Bible, but while also applying their skills for the New Testament. Many "believers" of mainstream kind might (or probably will) be shocked from learning what the archaeological research provides for information, [education]. Part of the information is also surprising (in a good way) when first learning it and one aspect of what's welcome in this is that it shows that ancient people exaggerated and made up stories committed to religious texts just like people today exaggerate, distort, fabricate, ... stories. It's refreshing to be reminded that they were [human] and not God, say; while it's not something I've forgotten, many people seem to be forgetful about such facts. "The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bible_Unearthed Critically objective thinking is essential, definitely including for religious believers.

Since I've only posted at

Since I've only posted at Truthout.org maybe a couple of times over ... years, I'll start by saying HELLO to regular readers. I came across the following interesting topic a couple of days ago, what archaeologists have to say about the Bible's texts and which is considerably (to say the least, I guess) different from "mainstream" beliefs. "King David was a nebbish And Exodus never happened and the walls of Jericho did not come a-tumbling down. How archaeologists are shaking Israel to its biblical foundations" by Laura Miller, Feb 7, 2001 http://archive.salon.com/books/feature/2001/02/07/solomon/index.html The above article is short, but it says some certainly interesting things, one of which is related to the book with the title I used for the Wikipedia page linked further below. The book's by "Israel Finkelstein, chairman of the Archaeology Department at Tel Aviv University," and "archaeology historian and journalist Neil Asher Silberman". Another professor of archaeology, an achaeologist anyway, at Tel Aviv U., Ze'ev Herzog, is also quoted in the above salon.com article. They provide welcome views or information of archaeological basis, which we can quickly see, when learning what these people say, is very important, or crucial, for old texts. The Old Testament appears to be the part that the archaeological researchers evidently do especially focus on when it comes to the Bible, but while also applying their skills for the New Testament. Many "believers" of mainstream kind might (or probably will) be shocked from learning what the archaeological research provides for information, [education]. Part of the information is also surprising (in a good way) when first learning it and one aspect of what's welcome in this is that it shows that ancient people exaggerated and made up stories committed to religious texts just like people today exaggerate, distort, fabricate, ... stories. It's refreshing to be reminded that they were [human] and not God, say; while it's not something I've forgotten, many people seem to be forgetful about such facts. "The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bible_Unearthed Critically objective thinking is essential, definitely including for religious believers.

This was a very thoughtful

This was a very thoughtful review of an ambitious enterprise. Crumb has somehow always been involved with Jewish women and has never been shy about his wide range of feelings toward them. He has a personal interest in the Jewish tradition. I think he also has enough skepticism left in his soul to examine things with relative care. I hope that Crumb's treatment of the subject adds to the understanding that this is one tradition among many and is not better or worse than others. The fact that the OT is embedded in Western culture seems to give the State of Israel a free ride when it claims its right to take land that belongs to other people. When reading the OT,we all should remember the simple admonition: THOU SHALT NOT STEAL and act accordingly.

I despise bible talk, it is

I despise bible talk, it is all so bogus and fictional. But I love art and Crumb.

Surprising that someone so

Surprising that someone so smart could be so apparently ignorant, biased, and narrowminded in your simplistically distorted discussion of Israel and the Jewish state.

The Jerome Biblical

The Jerome Biblical Commentary (Raymond Brown et al -- Prentice Hall) is recommended to all who want serious scolarship about Judaeo-Christian scripture. Note that Genesis is didactic fiction which incorporates earlier creation and flood literature. The Abraham and Isaac story shows that the Israelites were rejecting the human sacrifice of the peoples around them. The Hebrew scripture which soon gave us the most important moral code of all time (the Ten Commandments) deserves the most earnest scholarship. That's the moral code which Jesus accepted (along with the foundational double commandment to love God and love people.)

Wow1 For years mainstream

Wow1 For years mainstream biblical scholars have advised folks that large portions of the Bible should be rated X or at least R. It is one of the remarkable characteristics that the story is told without covering the flaws of principal characters. If Crumb's Genesis plunges people into really reading the text and discussing their questions and insights with each other (the Bible is a communal book, not a private book) it will be a gift to synagogs and congregations. While the article and comments concentrated on the sexy issues I can hardly wait to see if Crumb's images help folks see that the Creation stories in chapter 1 & 2 are two distinct stories with differing orders of creation. Will it help people realize that chapter 1 is not a "how done it" that "who dun it," a great communally recited story which puts the sun and moon in their place, making them creatures rather than the gods worshipped by Egypt and Babylonia.... Will the Song of Solomon be Crumb's next visual commentary??? Can't wait....

Though the OT was available,

Though the OT was available, as Anonymous points out on 10/25, long before Martin Luther, few could READ thus making "availability" moot. (Not to mention the rarity of physical copies.) The exception, of course, were the Hebrew scholars later known as rabbis (teachers). So interpretation has always been in the hands of the "priests," until we get to the fundamentalist literalists. And because so many of the stories are baffling and seemingly at odds with a so-called Christian ethos, even literalists largely continue to depend on their clergy for interpretation. Just ask your fundamentalist, oops, excuse me, evangelical, relative.

The Church forbade

The Church forbade unauthorized translation of the Bible into vernacular language, on pain of death, for centuries. You didn't see Biblical literalism start becoming a widespread problem until the production of the King James Version in English. I got the book - it is as amazing as you'd expect. If you have in interest in history and in great illustration, you will love it.

Amazing how world wide the

Amazing how world wide the priestess culture thrived! Will check out the book. "The Mists of Avalon" offers the King Arthur and Merlin legend from women. And isn't it amazing how the "religious" don't know a thing about what's really in the Bible. And, lastly, read "One Nation Under Israel" No bias, just fact.

As an admirer of Crumb I

As an admirer of Crumb I will check it out though I have no use for the Judeo-Christian tradition. All that dualism is very destructive.

Regarding Noah and Ham: A

Regarding Noah and Ham: A recent lecture I heard addressed the issue of Noah's nakedness as a revelation of Ham's breaking familial intimacy with his father. That is, he "saw" nakedness when he should have only seen his father β€” who happened to have nothing on. It still sounds like a minor thing, but apparently it is related to an either/or attitude about parental love and respect (especially, I guess, when one of them goes on a bender). I imagine those times had lots of either/or issues. Glad to see Crumb still at work. Anyone who has seen "Crumb" the movie knows what a miracle his having a productive life really is.

I've always been a big R.

I've always been a big R. Crumb fan and I look forward to receiving my copy as a xmas gift. :-) Of course, a gnostic/humanist's take on Genesis is most refreshing, but the definitive (for those with more atheistic leanings like me) artistic interpretation of this story has already been done: www.thebricktestament.com/genesis/index.html