othello circumscised
Transcription
othello circumscised
Othello Circumcised: Shakespeare and the Pauline Discourse of Nations Author(s): Julia Reinhard Lupton Source: Representations, No. 57 (Winter, 1997), pp. 73-89 Published by: University of California Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2928664 . Accessed: 16/07/2011 13:34 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at . http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=ucal. . 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University of California Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Representations. http://www.jstor.org JULIA REINHARD LUPTON OthelloCircumcised: Shakespeare and the Pauline Discourse of Nations Etienne Balibar proIN HIS ESSAY "IS THERE A NEO-RACISM?" poses thatwe now live under a new ideology of the nations,a "racism-withoutraces"thatpromotesvariousformsof ethniccleansingunder thealibiof "cultural" identity, purity,or autonomy,a discoursethatco-optsand neutralizesthe postwar of the vocabularyof liberal humanismand pluralism.Balibar linksthisneoracism of the earlymodern period: late modern to theprotoracism conceptof race as itsmaindriving A racismwhichdoes nothavethepseudo-biological forcehas alwaysexisted,and it has existedat exactlythislevelof secondarytheoretical Modernanti-Semitism-the formwhichbeis anti-Semitism. Itsprototype elaborations. ifnotindeedfromtheperiodin in theEuropeof theEnlightenment, ginsto crystallize nationalistic inflexion and theInquisition gavea statist, whichtheSpainoftheReconquista thewhole a "culturalist" racism... . inmanyrespects anti-Judaism-is totheological already racismmaybe considered,fromtheformalpointof view,as a of currentdifferentialist fortheinterpretation Thisconsideration isparticularly anti-Semitism. important generalized of contemporary Arabaphobia,especiallyin France,sinceit carrieswithit an imageof withEuropeanness.' oftheworld"whichis incompatible Islamas a "conception Mapping contemporaryneo-racismonto the deep structuresof anti-Semitism, Balibar derives the anti-Islamicstrain in contemporarypolitics from the long traditionof anti-Jewishthoughtin Westernhistoriography.FollowingBalibar's diagnosis,I argue here thatShakespeare'sOthelloprovidesa canonical articulation of this protoracisminsofaras the play fashionsthe Muslim in the image of the Jewaccordingto theprotocolsofPauline exegesis;in Balibar'sterms,Othellostages a "culturalist"rather than biologisticordering of intergroup relations,a religiouslygrounded discoursebarelyvisiblefromthe vantage point of the modern readable in the racial theories that have since displaced it, yet intermittently strangelightof the neoracismthathas emerged in recentyears. A fundamentalreligiousambiguityvexestheracializationofOthello throughout the play; although his professed Christianityauthorizes Othello's place in Venice, the play never decisivelydetermineswhetherhe has converted froma pagan religionor fromIslam. I argue thattheblack Gentileof a universalchurch undergirdsOthello'sopening narrativeof internationalromance,but thatthisdivine comedyof pagan conversionis continuallyshadowed bythe more troubling possibilityof Othello's entrance into Christianityvia its disturbingneighbor,Islam. This secondaryscenario,whichsubsumes Islam withinwhat Balibar calls "a REPRESENTATIONS 57 * Winter1997 C) THE REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA 73 situatesthe Moor in both greater proximitywith and generalizedanti-Semitism," greaterresistanceto ChristianRevelationthan the pagan, who is conceived as a Christianreinscription.These cateblank slate more open to a transformative gories and theirpeculiar constellationin the play are inheritedfromSaint Paul's divisionof humanityintoGreek,Jew,and barbarian,nationaldifferencesthatare sublated in the ideal of the universalchurch.Yet thisis an always-futureuniversality,whichis projectedbythe continueddialecticbetweenthe open embrace of the Christianmessage on the one hand and the residual ethnicexclusivismrepresentedbytheJewson theother,a tensionthatprovidesa foundationalmapping of theWesternethno-politicalfield.In thetypologicalschemesof theRenaissance, Islam representsa double scandal, the catastrophicbastardizationof both Christian universalism-through the seductivedanger of the Islamic world missionand Jewishparticularism,representedby Muslimallegiance to rituallaws and to an AbrahamicmonotheismwithoutChrist. Disclosingthe play'srelianceon thePauline divisionof the nationsnecessarily reorientsthe currentcolor-based approach to the play,in which the scandal of racial Imagi"monstrous"miscegenationinheritedfromthe nineteenth-century Indeed, ifwe insiston naryhas come to governOthello'seconomyof differences.2 graftingthe typicallymodern question of Othello's color onto the problem of Othello'sreligion,the resultsmightnot fallwherewe expect them.Looking from Venicewestand farto thesouth,towardpagan Africaand theNew World,Othello would appear darker skinned,barbarian, and perhaps more capable of a full conversionbecause of his religiousinnocence. Looking east, towardArabia and Turkey,and to the northernparts of Africa,Othello would become a Muslimturned-Christian, probablylighterskinnedthan his Gentileversion,inheritorof a monotheisticcivilizationalready marked by frequentcontactswith Christian Europe and hence more likelyto go renegade. Whereas for the modern reader or viewera black Othello is more subversive,"other,"or dangerous, in the Renaissance scene a paler Othello morecloselyresemblingtheTurkswhom he fights of the Christianparadigms set mightactuallychallengemore deeply the integrity up in the play as the measure of humanity.Critics have rightlydecried the movementto "whiten"or "orientalize"Othello.3It is certainly nineteenth-century not myintentionto returnto such a projectbut ratherto insistthatthismove in the nineteenthcenturytook place withinan alreadyracializeddiscourse,whereas in Othelloreligiousdifferenceis more powerfullyfeltthanracial difference,which was only then beginning to surface in its virulentmodern form. Rather than deciding whatcolor Othello "really"is, I argue thatthe play initiallydraws moral and physiological"blackness"away fromthe diabolical and bestial imagerymanipulated by lago into the more positivecircuitof the Gentilebarbarian,a recuperation thatin turnis undercutby the potentialattractionbetween the "Moor" and the "Mohammedan." Shakespeare does not use Christianityto rise above color-basedracismso much as his play rendersvisiblethe blindspotof ethnosthat 74 REPRESENTATIONS mortgagesthe inclusivevisionof Christianhumanism,a blindspotmarked above all by the unerasable yetnongeneticscar of circumcisionin Shakespeare's Venetian plays. Entries into Covenant Othello,one of Shakespeare's middle tragedies,has oftenbeen read as a rewritingof TheMerchantof Venice:both are set in the mercantilecity-stateof Venice,both employclearlymarked "others,"and both use the themeof conspicuous exogamy to heighten the conventionalcomedic situationof young lovers exhibitsa comedicstructuresharplytypological blockedbyan old father.Merchant in itscounteringofJewishjustice and Christianmercy,a set of scripturalcoordinates more carefullysubmergedyetall the more powerfullyat workin Othelloas well. lago's cryto Brabantio,"Look to yourhouse, yourdaughter,and yourbags," clearlyrecallsShylock'swail,"'My daughter! 0 myducats! 0 mydaughter,"'and Brabantio,like Shylock,is promised "thebloodybook of the law" in recompense for the loss of his daughter.4Yet Brabantio of course is no Jew,but one of the "brothersof the state,"a citizenand senatorin thisChristianmaritimerepublic (Othello1.2.98). The figureof Brabantio instantiatesthe typenot so much of the Jew per se as of theJewishChristianaddressed by Saint Paul in his epistlesto the Romans and the Galatians. Paul opens the Epistle to the Romans by insistingon the inclusivenessof his message: andtobarbarians, I am underobligation toGreeks bothtothewiseand tothefoolish;so both I am eagerto preachthegospeltoyoualsowhoareinRome.For I am notashamedof the and gospel;itis thepowerof God forsalvationto everyone whohas faith,totheJewfirst also totheGreek.5 In thefirstline,Paul expresseshisobligation"to Greeksand tobarbarians,"taking up the Hellenistic division of the world between civilized Greek-speakersand inarticulatenon-Greeks.Paul thenextends his message to the Christiancommunityin Rome, implicitlylinked here to the Greeks as the modern inheritorsof classicalculture.6The nextverse moves fromthe Hellenisticopposition between Greeksand barbariansto the Hebraic divisionof peoples betweenJewsand Gentiles; Paul'sjudicious phrasing,"to theJewfirstand also to the Greek,"recognizes the historicalpriorityof theJewsin the receptionof Revelation,yetinsistsas well on the necessarydisseminationof that message to the second, larger group of Greeks. The Hellenisticand Hebraic theoriesof the nationscondensed in Paul's address to the Romans likelyresponds to the unhappy splitof his audience bethe firstgroup having no nattweenGentileand Jewishconvertsto Christianity, ural relation to the Hebrew Scripturesso centralto Pauline hermeneutics,and the second circlestilldeeply investedin thelawsof theTorah.7Finally,theselines, Othello Circumcised: Shakespeareand thePaulineDiscourseofNations 75 like the epistle in general,acknowledgeand reconcile the claims of both groups in the new church by presentingfaithas the common sign of righteousnessfor all Christians. The legacy of Romans to the Westerndiscourse of the nations is caught between Paul's urge to discountthe legal observancesof contemporaryJewson the one hand and to granthistoricalsignificanceto theJewsas a people on the other, impulses that equally stem fromPaul's sense of theJews as an ethnos,a tribeor nation bound by a common language, law,and genealogy.Unlike Galatians,Romans does not forbid the observance of Jewishlaws such as circumcision,but makesthemadiaphora,mattersofdoctrinalindifference;put otherwise,such practicesare (merely)cultural-belongingto the domain of communalcustom,which, though not harmfuland sometimeseven positivelygood, nonetheless have no significancein the drama of salvation. In Daniel Boyarin'sjudgment, although Paul's project "is not anti-Semitic(or even anti-Judaic)in intent,it nevertheless has theeffectof deprivingcontinuedJewishexistenceofanyrealityor significance in the Christianeconomies of history."8 The triumphof the Gentile mission,by no means a givenin Paul's historicalmoment,would eventuallylead to the forthrightlyanti-Jewish interpretation of Paul in the Church Fathersand Reformation theologians.9Yet European modernityalso owes to Paul the knittingof the Hebrew Bible, reconceivedas the Old Testament,into the scripturalcanon and exAs Hans Hubner has argued, Paul egeticalconsciousnessof GentileChristianity. remained investedin "thetheologicalrelevance[of] thehistoryof Israel";'0 Paul's typologicalrevaluation of the Torah, like his relativizationof Jewish law, also springs from his cultural reading of Judaism, which, as the archetypalethnos, coheres as a historicalentitycapable of modelingfortha comparable integrityfor other nationsand forthe churchin Christianhistoriography." The Epistles divide theJew between three basic types: thoseJewswho, like Paul, convertedto Christianity;thoseJewswho remainedJewish,not accepting Jesus as the Messiah; and the ancient Israelitesof the Hebrew Bible whose lives and words typologicallypredictthe eventsof the new era. Whereas the Shylock of Shakespeare's earlierVenice is a figureof obdurate intransigenceto Christian conversionin the typologicaltraditionof Esau and Laban, Brabantio takes the ratherdifferentpartof theJewishChristiansin Paul's epistle.Brabantioexcludes Othello fromthe "nationof our wealthy,curled darlings"(Othello1.2.69), implicwhen Brabantio refersso conitlyequating "nation"withnatioor birth;similarly, fidentlyto his "brothersof the state,"we are leftwiththereligiousquestion,"Who 2 Brabantio, like the JewishChristiansof Paul's Epistle to the is my brother?"' Romans, would presumablyrestrictthe circleof brothersto nativeVenetians,to those tied to him by blood and custom.Yet Brabantio,as a typeof theJudaized Christianrather than a Jew proper, is not a villain; unlike Shylockor Barabas, Brabantio appears clannishbut not evil,myopicallywed to externalappearances, 76 REPRESENTATIONS "toall thingsof sense" (1.2.65), butnotwithouttheAbrahamicvirtueof hospitality thathelped lead to the presentcrisis. Othello, byextension,takes the roles of Gentileand barbarian in Paul's divisions of the human kingdom.Othello's entryinto the play as a convertto Christianityinitiallystationshim in the traditionof the three kings at the Epiphany, oftenrepresentedas theEuropean, African,and Asian recipientsof Christianity's world message in Renaissance iconography.Bearing exotic offeringsof frankincense and myrrhto the manger of the Christchild, the Africanking Balthazar bringsthe giftsof his culturein the sense of givingthemup, ceding a measure of cultural identityin the act of conversion.'3The three kings were typologically keyed to the three sons of Noah, taken as the forefathersof the world's white, black, and yellowpeoples; in such a scheme, Othello-as-Balthazarbecomes the epochal negation of Ham, fatherof the black nations. In patristicand rabbinic traditions,Ham broughtthe curse of blacknessonto his descendantsby sleeping withhis wife on the ark; Shakespeare, however,is careful to show Othello and flood"(Othello2.1.2) and "enchafed Desdemona arrivingfromthe"high-wrought ships,redeemingratherthanrepeatingHam's transgresflood"(2.1.17) on separate sion.'4 In these early scenes, the black Othello functionsas the livingsymbolof Christianuniversalism,a social and spiritualvisionthatstands as the testof Brabantio's"Judaizing"constructionsof nationalbrotherhood.Whereas in Merchant, Jessica'selopement withLorenzo fromthe house of Shylockstages the historic in Othellothe marriageof a barbarian groom shiftfromJudaism to Christianity, to a Christianbride figuresforththe extensionof the Christianmessage from European Gentilesto all the nationsof the world. From thistypologicalperspective,the marriage of whiteand black, of Greek and barbarian, far fromrepreor scandal, assumes almostcosmic significance,its harmosentinga monstrosity nies resonatingwiththe exultantcoloraturaof the Song of Songs. This epochal scene of Gentileconversion,I argue, initiallycontrolsthe play of black-whiteimageryin the drama. lago uses bestial and demonic images of blackness in order to deformand prejudice Brabantio's-and by extension the audience's-reception of theelopement. lago in turnhas his own strangelinksto hisfamousnegationof theJewishGod's unspeakable name, theworldofMerchant: "I am not what I am" (Othello1.1.67), flagshim as the Devil of the play and roots seasoned bythe him in a parodicallyOld Testamentethosof historicalressentiment, damaged pride and nurturedspite of all the Cains, Ishmaels, and Esaus passed over in the Bible for younger favored sons. It is lago, for example, who warns Brabantio about "yourhouse, your daughter,and your bags," as if the character ofVeniceintoOthello. of lago were responsibleforraisingthespiritof TheMerchant Even lago's infamousimage of bestialcross-coupling,"an old black ram/Is tupping your white ewe" (1.1.90-91), echoes Merchant'smost egregious pun, that between "ewes" and "Iewes,"'5irradiatingthe play'smostcited example of color- Circumcised: Othello Shakespeareand thePaulineDiscourseofNations 77 based racismwithan animus of a differentcolor. lago's presentationof blackness as the sign of a savage, unredeemable nature is soon marked by the play as historicallybankrupted throughthe epochal weightgranted to Othello as a lattertrial scene), a Christian day Balthazar (the name chosen by Portia in Merchant's soldier who traces "his lifeand being/From men of royalsiege" (Othello1.2.2122), an exegeticalgenealogythatderiveshis noble personage fromthethreekings of a global Epiphany.'6 It would be easy enough, however,to love thisvisionof Christianhumanism disnot wiselybut too well. In Shakespeare's Venetianplays,Christian-humanist a set that excludes minusthecircumcised, course always operates as a universalism not the unconvertedpagans of the New Worldbut rathertheJewsand the Muslims, strictmonotheismsexistingnot far away but close at hand. Judaism and Islam stem fromthe same Abrahamic lineage as Christianity;the three groups are, in the Muslim phrase, "people of the book," religionsorganized around revealed Scripturesthatshare manyof the same prophetsand patriarchs.Othello's role as defender of the faithagainst the Mohammedan Turks is faulted by the possibilitythathe has convertedto ChristianityfromIslam, an entryinto a covenant thatwould tracea differentarc fromthatof the Gentilebarbarian,locating the pre-ChristianOthello not antelegem-beforeor outside the revealed law that singledout theJewsfromthenationsof theworld-but sublege,under a stringent monotheismuntempered by Christ'slove.'7 John Pory's appendix to his 1600 andDescription ofAfricalistsfourreligionson translationof Leo Africanus'sHistory 18 a catalog the dark continent,"Gentiles,lewes, Mahumetans, and Christians," thatclearlydistinguishes"Mahumetans"from"Gentiles."ThePolicyoftheTurkish betweenMuslim monotheEmpire,an anonymoustractfrom1597, differentiates ism and Gentile polytheism:"Touching the Godhead, [Muslims] acknowledge bothwiththe lews and Christiansthatthereis one onelyGod: Whereintheydiffer of Gods."'9 Such passages separate fromthe Gentiles,who had theirmultiplicitie Islam out frompaganismand correlateitwithJudaismbased on the tworeligions' scriptural,legal, and monotheisticbases. In Christiantypology,the Muslim was bound to theJew throughthe figure of Ishmael. For Saint Paul, Ishmael is the typeof thecarnal Israel or modernJew: thatAbrahamhad twosons,one bya slaveand one bya freewoman.But Foritis written theson of theslavewasbornaccordingto theflesh,theson of thefreewomanthrough thesewomenaretwocovenants. One is fromMountSinai, promise.Nowthisisan allegory: bearingchildrenforslavery;sheis Hagar.NowHagaris MountSinaiin Arabia;she corforshe is in slaverywithherchildren.(Gal. 4.22-25) respondsto thepresentJerusalem, With the rise of Islam, the figureof Ishmael as a negative type of the Jew was transferredonto Mohammed, a translationalreadyauthorizedbythe Islamic appropriationof Ishmael foritsown propheticgenealogy.Christiantypologistsalso 78 REPRESENTATIONS used Esau, Pharaoh, and Herod to couple theJewand the Muslim as carnal children of Abraham facingeach other across the world-historicbreak effectedby the Incarnation.20Islam, the youngestof the three Abrahamic religions,reprea kind ofJudaismafterthe fact,a redoubling sented to Renaissance Christianity ofJewishintransigencein thefaceof Christianrevelation.As such,Islam executed a second, even crueleraffrontto Christianity's historicalvisionof epochal succesthe modern Christian since sion, Judaism (from perspective)is merelya residual carryoverfroman earlier moment,but Islam fromitsveryinceptioncarried out its proselytizingmissionin fullknowledgeof Christianteachings.The rapid expansion of Islam, however,presentedthe inverseofJudaism'sdispersed,sequestered,and inward-lookingcommunities.The thirdRevelationannounced by Islam rejected the particularism associated with Judaism in favor of the liketherulersof European Christendom, universalismpioneered byChristianity; the Arab and then Turkishempires used the theme of spiritualequalityamong the nationsto support theirreligiousand politicalprojects.2' Brabantio's warning against "bondslaves and pagans" (Othello1.2.101) acknowledges the two possible avenues of Othello's entryinto Christianity.More than simplysynonyms,the pointedlypaired words representdistinctlocationsin theplay'sconceptualgeographyof thenations:thebondslavenames thecondition of Hagar, her offspring,and his Ishmaelite progeny,while the pagan identifies the state of the Gentile barbarian, potentialrecipientof the expanded Pauline mission. Whereas the firstacts of the play establishOthello as Christiansoldier and devoted husband, the middle movementof the tragedyinstigatesa crisisin both the maritaland the religiouscovenantsthatbind Othello to Venice. If the remainder of the play chartsOthello's increasingdistance fromthe role of the Africankingestablishedin act one, we mustpay attentionto the effectsthatthese competingscriptsfor the entryinto covenanthave on Othello's tragicexit from it. As the play progresses,is Othello, as criticshave frequentlysuggested,paganized-made exotic, savage, and barbaric-or is he also Islamicizedand Judaized, broughtback into contactwitha law thatshould have been dissolved by the rite of baptism? In the play,paganization describesOthello's decline into gullibility, madness, and cruelty,a process emblematizedby the infamoushandkerchief,its subtilefabricwoven out of the iconographyof the Gentilegods. Even as Othello descends into pagan fury,however,he also begins to "turn Turk" (2.3.164), a phrase thatnames Islamicizationas a tragictrajectorythatrunsalongside thepath of barbarization,paralleling,elaborating,and deviatingfromit.This second path revertsnot to anarchyantelegembut to a tyrannysub lege,a transformationembodied by Othello's increasingidentificationwitha jealous justice that must be executed at any cost, a law driven by the fiercemonogamy of an immoderate monotheism. This process climaxesin Othello's anguished retortto Desdemona's denials: Othello Circumcised: Shakespeareand thePaulineDiscourseof Nations 79 Thou doststonemyheart, Andmakesme callwhatI intendtodo a sacrifice. A murder, whichI thought (5.2.67-69) Lord "whose name is Jealous" 34.14), (Exod. obedient by Desdemona's percession (though identifies him with the old law, ruled by the "sacrifice" simultaneously Othello's that of Christ. Whereas by no means simply instantiates) in the play tend to emphasize noted Othello's increasing association although Othello's as the mas- with justice, usually understood synthesis even while grotesquely different: the Semitic strands out of reinforcing the authority of increasing alliance with the law is indeed chal, I would insist on the Abrahamic suwith studies of race patriarchy.22 My point is somewhat Othello's justice, like that of Shylock, serves to separate the husband; resonates feminist critics have the movement of paganization, culinist tenets of Judeo-Christian the Judeo-Christian the law's epochal and indicates love, insofar as her death (Judeo-Islamic) patriar- of the word connotations patriarch.23 Othello Circumcised Othello's stages his double final autobiography rativesof paganizationand Islamicization: placement in the nar- Then mustyou speak Of one thatlovednotwiselybuttoowell; Of one noteasilyjealous but,beingwrought, Perplexedin theextreme;ofone whosehand, threwa pearlaway Likethebase Indian[ludean],24 Richer than all his tribe;of one whose subdued eyes, Albeitunused to the meltingmood, Drops tearsas fastas the Arabian trees Their medicinablegum. Set you down this: And say besides thatin Aleppo once, Where a malignantand a turbanedTurk Beata Venetianand traducedthestate, I took byth'throatthe circumciseddog Andsmotehim,thus. In the exotic parable departure swiftly followed by the reference Their medicinable (Matt. 2.11), 80 the rejected pearl condenses of the base Indian, with Othello's of Desdemona (5.2.353-66) The the murder first simile is to tears that drop "as fast as the Arabian gum," an elaborate circumlocution myrrh manifests the economy REPRESENTATIONS from Christianity. trees/ for myrrh. As nativity gift of conversion, in which the Gentile kingsbringthe precious distillationsof theircountriesin exchange fora place in theChristianorder.In thewake ofDesdemona's murder,themyrrhalso functions as a figureof Othello'sregretand repentanceforhavingreneged on thatcontract, becomingthe medium of a "meltingmood" thatdissolvesthe universalisticonographyof Epiphany into the scene of conversion'sreversionback into the strange substances that distinguishthe nations. As the symbolof the Epiphany and its dissolution,the myrrhtree situatesOthello in a pagan scene, darkeninghis skin in itsallusive shade. Yet, as criticshave pointed out, the Folio text'ssubstitutionof "Judean" for coordi"Indian" installsOthello's tragedywithinanother set of mytho-historical edition,editorsand criticshave nates. Since Lewis Theobald's eighteenth-century occasionallyfavored the Folio reading, referringit to Judas's betrayalof Christ and to the Herod-Mariam storyofjealous murder,taken fromJosephus'sJewish oftheJewsas the materialfor several neo-Senecan dramas.25 Warand Antiquities Like Brabantio'srestricteduse of "nation,"the"tribe"of the"base ludean" implies worldviewin which the Christianpearl findsno a circumscribedand circumcised proper place, a rejection that stems not from the ignorance of the Indian but fromthe knowledgeof good and evilbroughtabout bythe law.26Moreover,ifwe read "base ludean" in termsof the Herod and Mariam story,a now familiartypological scenario takes shape withinthe confinesof the simile. Herod, an Idumean descended fromEsau, is a typeof the latter-dayMuslim as well as the inveterateJew,and his malignedbut faithfulwifeMariam,a sacrificialvictimin the Christologicalpatternshared withDesdemona, representstherighteousremnant who makes possible the historictransitioninto the new era.27 Rather than selecting"Judean" over "Indian," I followEdward Snow in insistinginstead that"each variantsuggestsa differentside of Othello."28"Indian" describesthe more broadlydrawn,more theatricallypowerfulmovementof the drama as the tragicbreakdown of Gentile conversion,yet the almost effortless substitutionof "Indian" by "Judean"followsthe path of Islamicizationthat falls out of the play's dominant turn toward barbarism,articulatingboth paganism and Islam as the startingpointsof two separate itinerariesintoand out of Christianity.Othello's recollectionof the Turk in Aleppo flowsout of this auxiliary reading. As criticshave oftenargued, Othello'sreenactmentof his earlierheroics both identifieshim with the Turk and killsoffthat identificationin the act of suicide,reassertingOthello'sallegiance to the Christianethicswhose standard he has borne. Yet these readings too oftenidentifythe Turk simplyas a "barbaric enemy,""the Infidel,"or one of a "proliferatingseriesof exoticizedothers."29To the contrary,it is myprojectto distinguishtheJudean fromthe Indian, theJew and the Muslim fromthe Gentilepagan. As Lynda Boose, one of the few criticsto move beyond the pagan reading, has pointed out, circumcisionratherthan skincolor is the traitthat Othello "invokes as the final,inclusivesign of his radical Otherness."30lago had already Othello Circumcised: Shakespeareand thePaulineDiscourseof Nations 81 evoked an epochal reading of circumcisionwhen he advised Cassio to elect Desdemona as his petitioner: And thenforher To wintheMoor-were'ttorenouncehisbaptism, Allsealsand symbols ofredeemedsinHis soulis so enfettered toherlove Thatshemaymake,unmake,do whatshelist. (Othello 2.3.336-40) of redeemed sin"linksbaptismto Saint Paul's reading The phrase "sealsandsymbols of circumcisionas "a signorseal" of faith(Rom. 4.1 1).31 In Judaism,circumcision has a performativeor constitutivefunction;it is a "seal" in the sense of an official imprimaturthatvalidatesand authenticatesthecontractbetweenman and God.32 Britmilah,"the covenantof circumcision,"operates as a kindof signature,since it ratifiesa contractand confersa Hebrew name; writtenon the body of the infant, thisname at once identifiesthe child'sabsolute uniqueness and situateshim in a networkof genealogical relations. For Paul, however,circumcisionbecomes an outwardmarkdesigned to reflect an internalconditionof faith,a "sign"in the sense of an externalindication.In Paul's words,"he is not a real Jewwho is one outwardly,nor is true circumcision somethingexternaland physical.He is a Jew who is one inwardly,and real circumcisionis a matterof the heart,spiritualand not literal"(Rom. 2.28-29). In the new era, circumcisionis relegated to the statusof a fallen sign (a mark that mayor maynot manifesta correspondinginnercondition)and a merelylegal seal (a bodily signature that establishes a purely formal covenant unmediated by spirit).In the dialecticof Christianhistory,circumcisiongives way to baptism,a sacramentthatleaves no bodilytraceof itsoperation,itstransparentand reflective watersdissolvingtheblood and erasingthescar ofcircumcision'sviolentlyinscriptivecut. In thejudgment ofJamesShapiro, "More than anythingelse in the sixteenth century... Paul's ideas about circumcisionsaturatedwhatShakespeare's contemI would add thatitwas porariesthought,wrote,and heard about circumcision."33 above all the riteof circumcisionin itsPauline articulationthatemblematizedthe affiliation betweentheJewand the Muslimin Christiantypologicalthought.The author of the PolicyoftheTurkish Empirelaysout the statusof the law in the three religions: Foras theJewshad a particular lawegivenuntothemand publishedbyGod himselfe in ofthesame)certainelawesand precepts mountSinai. .. So havetheTurkes(inimitation orCommandements laidedowneintheirAlcoran. .. Whichargueththattheirconfidence inthepietieand meriteoftheirvertuouslife,and consisteth and hopeofsalvation chiefely in thatpointfromtheopinionof some good deedes: And thattheydoe notmuchdiffer whodo attribute theirsalvationuntotheirmerites.34 Christians, 82 REPRESENTATIONS The passage setsup Islamiclaw as a belated versionof theTorah and an alienating mirrorof the Catholic Church. The author goes on to singleout circumcisionas a law thathad once been "a most holyand sacred sacrament,"but "is nowe converted . .. to a most idle and vaine ceremony"among Jewsand Muslims.35The tract,thoughstronglypolemical,actuallymakes some progressin depictingbasic Islamic tenetsand practices,differingon manypointsfromthe fantasticaccounts disseminatedfrommedieval sources. If the typologicalperspectivethreatensto make Islam disappear intoJudaism,reductivelyappropriatingthe one religion to the more familiarparadigms of the other,I would also insistthat the special historicalconsciousnessborn of typology-theinterestin coherentepochs or "cultures" fundamentalto Westernphilosophies of history-also helps account for the tract'srelativesuccess in depictinga foreignworldview.In the Policyof the and the descriptive-historiographical Turkish Empire,the assimilative-reductionist poles of typologicalconsciousnessexistin somethingof a balance; the same might ofVeniceand theirfurtherelabbe said forthe mimeticsuccessesof TheMerchant orationin Othello. ChristopherMarlowe'sJewofMalta, on the other hand, withits more naked debts to medievaldrama, lies towardthe allegoricalside of the typologicalcontinuum; in Marlowe'splay,the cut of circumcisionequates Jewand Muslim withan exemplary if reductive claritythat Shakespeare transmitsin more sublimated and successorthe forms.The JewBarabas chooses as his slave,partner-in-crime, "Make account of me /As of Muslim Ithamorebyacknowledgingtheiraffiliation: we hate Christiansboth."37The thyfellow;we are villainsboth:/Both circumcised, fellowshipbetweentheJewand theMuslimhas been signedand sealed in advance by the shared mark of circumcision,a permanent bodily sign that establishes membershipin a group but, unlike racial traitssuch as skin color, is produced throughthe deliberateexecutionof rituallaw. The name Ithamore is itselfborrowed fromthe Old Testament,where "Ithamar"appears as the youngestson of "-mar"into "-more,"Marlowe has effectively Aaron (Exod. 6.23); byintensifying Islamicized thistypeof theJewishpriest,semanticallyflaggingthe link between Judaic and Muslim law accordingto the habitsof Christiantypology.38 In appointinghimselfbothconfessorand executionerof Desdemona, Othello strugglesto assume a priestlyas well as a judicial function,becoming an "Ithamore,"a Moorish son of Aaron, but in a higher,more interiorized,mimeticregisterthanthatelaboratedin Marlowe'sfarcicalmoralityplay.In his suicide speech, Othello's drawn sword at once pointsoutwardto circumcisionas the traitidentireturnsit onto Othello's own body as fyingthe object of his scorn,and reflexively the verymeans of death, a finalstrokethatcuts offhis lifeby turningthe Turk into and onto himself.In one arc of its meaning,thiscut redeems the Moor in death, restoringhim to the historyof Veniceas one who has "done the statesome service"and who, like MaryMagdalene, has "loved not wiselybut too well."From thisperspective,circumcisionfunctionsas the emblem of Christiantypologypar Othello Circumcised: Shakespeareand thePaulineDiscourseofNations 83 cancellationthatallows for the reconexcellence, the vehicle of world-historical Othello's suicide, thatis, functionsas a marversionof the Moor to Christianity. tyrologicalbaptismin blood, an act thatcompletesand terminatesthe era of the law; throughhis suicide,Othello has become literally"circumcisedin the heart," not unlike Antonio in Shakespeare's earlier Venetianplay.At the same time,the cut that(re)circumcisesOthello does not disappear intoitstypologicalsublations. Instead it reinstatesthe Hebraic functionof the signature,the writtenlettersof a legallyratifyingand subjectivelyidentifyingmarkthatdislodges Othello from covenant.In thissense, the Christianhistoricalorderbylocatinghimin a different the suicide effectsa circumcisionaccordingto theJudeo-Islamicratherthan the signaturethatseparates Pauline-internalparadigm,constitutinga self-validating out Islam as a historico-theologicalposition distinctfrom paganism, a regime definedbythesingularimprintof circumcisionas thepersistent"seal and symbol" of the law. With thisritual gesture,Othello signs his finalautobiography,exacerbatingand inflamingas much as redeeming that ancient scar in the Pauline discourse of nations.This momentarypositingof Islam as its own dispensation both exceeds the typologicalvision (which would reduce Islam to its own categories of faithand nationhood) and is itselfanticipatedby the historiographical as a narrativeof epochal relations. impulse of Christianity Paul's ethno-politicaltheologycan accommodatethevastdifferencesbetween the Greek and the barbarian,but not the verylittledifferencebetween the circumcised and the uncircumcised.In Othello-Shakespeare's second letterto the Venetians-Christian universalism,circlingaround the black body of the Gentile convert,has the capacityto envisionif not realize a world of racialequality.It is like Islam, is a world religion,not a race, worthassertinghere thatChristianity, and does not belong to any civilizationas eitheritsspecial heritageor itscolonial weapon, to whateverdegree ithas been used as such. What Shakespeare's Pauline Christianity-and this is a paradox besettingall revealed religions-has more imaginingis a worldof religiousequalityamong the people of the book, difficulty an equality in which circumcision,maintainedas an external mark of covenant not erased through spiritualization,could be accounted for rather than discounted by Christianity'shistoricalscheme. In Othello,the romance of Gentile conversion supports the dream of a universal brotherhood that allows Shakespeare to set up and see throughthe black-whiteopposition. Yet this Christianhumanistdiscourse alwaysoperates as a universalismminusthe circumcised;the Jew and the Muslim are subtractedfromthe nationsof the world ingatheredby singled out and cut offbythe ritualstrokethroughwhichtheyconChristianity, tinue to distinguishthemselves.Odd as it may seem to contemporaryreaders caught up in the horizon of modern racism,it is Othello's religious ratherthan racial traitsthat prove more intractablein the Christianvision staged by Shakespeare's play,an obduracy that points in turn to the vicissitudesof Renaissance 84 REPRESENTATIONS protoracismin the shapes of neoracismthat have emerged at the end of our bloody century. Notes 1. 2. 3. 4. Among the people who generouslyread and commentedon thisessay in draftform, I'd like to thankin particularThomas Albrecht,JonathanCrewe, Robert Folkenflik, Richard Halpern, KimberlyMoekle, PatriciaPhillippy,Kenneth Reinhard, and the editorsat Representations. Etienne Balibar, "Is There a Neo-Racism?"in Etienne Balibar and Emmanuel Walltrans. Chris Turner (London, 1991), Identities, erstein,Race, Nation,Class: Ambiguous 23-24. The groundworkfor this orientationwas laid by the historicalcriticismof Eldred TheAfricanin EnglishRenaissanceDrama (London, 1965), Jones, Othello'sCountrymen: and Cultural and G. K. Hunter, "Othello and Colour Prejudice,"in DramaticIdentities and His Contemporaries (Liverpool, Eng., 1978), as well Tradition:Studiesin Shakespeare as the politicaland psychoanalyticmythcriticismof Leslie A. Fiedler,TheStrangerin Shakespeare (New York, 1972). In the recentwave of essays,the black-whiteopposition explored byArthurLittle,"'An essence that'snot seen': The has been mostfruitfully Quarterly 44, no. 3 (Fall 1993): 304-24, Shakespeare PrimalScene of Racism in Othello," YaleJournalof and JonathanCrewe, "Out of the Matrix: Shakespeare's Race-Writing," Criticism 8, no. 2 (1995): 13-29. Karen Newman, "'And wash the Ethiop white': Femand in Shakespeare Reproduced:TheTextin History ininityand the Monstrousin Othello," ed. Jean E. Howard and Marion F. O'Connor (New York, 1987); PatriciaParIdeology, and Bringingto Light,"in Margo ker,"Fantasiesof 'Race' and 'Gender': Africa,Othello, in theEarlyModernPeriod Hendricks and PatriciaParker,Women,"Race,"and Writing (London, 1994); and Michael Neill,"Unproper Beds: Race, Adultery,and the Hideous 40, no. 4 (Winter1989), have focused on monstrosity Quarterly in Othello," Shakespeare MoretoShakeand miscegenation.Stephen Greenblatt,RenaissanceSelf-Fashioningfrom speare(Chicago, 1980); Parker; Newman; and Emily Bartels, "Making More of the Quarterly Moor: Aaron, Othello, and Renaissance Refashioningsof Race," Shakespeare 41, no. 4 (Winter 1990), have excavated travelnarrativesas sources and models of Othello'sprotocolonialpractice,a dimensionemphasized froma postcolonialangle in Ania Loomba, "The Color of Patriarchy:CriticalDifference,CulturalDifference,and and Ania "Race,"and Writing; Renaissance Drama," in Hendricksand Parker,Women, Loomba, Gender,Race, RenaissanceDrama (Manchester,Eng., 1989). Bartels assumes that Othello was a Muslim,but does not develop the tensionsbetween race and religion, a dynamicon whichLynda Boose, "'The Gettingof a Lawful Race': Racial Discourse in Early Modern England and the UnrepresentableBlack Woman," in Henhas reflectedsuggestively. dricksand Parker,Women, "Race,"and Writing, See Neill, "Unproper Beds," 385. ed.John ofVenice, Othello,ed. David Bevington(New York, 1980), 1.1.82; TheMerchant Russell Brown (London, 1955), 2.7.15; Othello1.3.69-71. (All subsequent citationsof these playsare fromthese editions.) OthelloCircumcised:Shakespeare and the Pauline Discourse of Nations 85 ofSt. Paul (New York, 1972). (All 5. Rom. 1.14-16, in Wayne Meeks, ed., The Writings subsequent citationsof Paul are fromthisedition; emphasis added.) 6. As WayneMeeks comments,Paul "looksto Rome ... as thecenterof the knownworld, and his visittherebecomes a symbolforthe universalityof his mission'among all the ofSt.Paul, 66. Gentiles'(Rom. 1.5)"; Meeks, Writings 7. Accordingto modernscholarsof Paul, theJewishcommunityin Rome, includingthose had been exiled by Claudius around 49 C.E. and who had convertedto Christianity, returnedto the citywiththe accession of Nero in 54, a returnthat may have led to tensionsbetween Gentile and JewishChristiansin the Roman church at the time of ofSt.Paul, 67. Hans Hubner summarizesand rejectsthis Paul's letter;Meeks, Writings argument,takingwhat seems to be a minorityposition,namelythat Paul's more tolerant attitude towardJewish law in Romans (as compared to Galatians) reflectsa change of heartratherthanofrhetoricalsituation;Hans Hubner,Law inPaul's Thought, ed. John Riches,trans.James C. G. Greig (1978, reprint:Edinburgh, 1984), 5. (Berkeley,1994), 32. 8. Daniel Boyarin,A RadicalJew:Paul and thePoliticsofIdentity 9. The twentiethcenturyhas seen a more balanced look at Paul's Jewishsources as well exegeticaltraditionsfounded on as a salutaryextricationof Paul fromthe anti-Jewish his epistlesbyfiguressuch as MartinLuther.On Paul and Judaism,see W.D. Davies, Paul and RabbinicJudaism:SomeRabbinicElementsin Pauline Theology(1955, reprint: New York, 1967), and E. P. Sanders, Paul, theLaw, and theJewishPeople(Philadelphia, 1983); for examples of revisionistChristianreadings of Paul in the wake of the Ho(New York, ofChristianity and theFoundations locaust,see Alan Davies, ed., Antisemitism 1979). For a briefhistoryof Pauline scholarshipin lightof the Jewishquestion, see Boyarin,RadicalJew,39-56. 10. Hilbner,Law, 56. 11. Erich Auerbach, in his stilldefinitiveessay on typologicalinterpretation,writesthat this exegetical principleinsured that the Old Testament became part of European civilization;Erich Auerbach, "Figura,"in ScenesfromtheDrama ofEuropeanLiterature (1959, reprint:Minneapolis,Minn., 1984), 52. See also Karl Lowithon the importance of the Biblical idea of the nationforWesternhistoriography;Karl Lowith,Meaningin History(Chicago, 1949), 195-96. 12. The distinctionbetween "brother"and "stranger"establishedin Deuteronomy is of course crucial to the intergroupeconomyof TheMerchantofVenice;whereas the Jew distinguishes"brother"and "stranger,"not lending moneyto the one but permitting it to the other,the Christianis supposed to take all men as his brother; Marc Shell, Money,Language,and Thought(Baltimore, 1982), 51. Brabantio presumablyconcurs withRoderigo's assessmentthatthe Moor is "an extravagantand wheeling stranger" (Othello1.1.139)-not included in the Venetianbrotherhood. 13. PeterErikson,"Representationsof Blacks and Blacknessin the Renaissance,"Criticism 34, no. 4 (Fall 1993): 499-527. Shakespeare uses epiphanyimageryin his description of Morocco's love of Portia: "'Who chooseth me shall gain what many men desire.'/ Why,that'sthe lady,all the worlddesiresher./Fromthe fourcornersof the earththey 2.7.37-40). Withthe come/To kissthisshrine,thismortalbreathingsaint"(Merchant exceptionof Erikson,recentcriticsof Othelloignore thisstrandof racial iconography. BlackFace,MalignedRace: TheRepresentation Loomba, Gender,42; AnthonyBarthelemy, toSoutherne (Baton Rouge, La., 1987), 3-4; ofBlacksin EnglishDramafromShakespeare and Little,"Primal Scene," 308, emphasize the equation of blackness with evil and devilishnessin the Christiantraditionbut do not note the counterthemeof Gentile conversion. 86 REPRESENTATIONS 14. Hunter citesBede's commentaryon St. Matthew:"Mysticeautem tresMagi trespartes mundi significant,Asiam, Africam,Europam, sive humanum genus, quod a tribus filiisNoe seminariumsumpsit";Hunter,"Othello and Colour Prejudice,"50. For the patristictraditionon Ham, see AugustineCityofGod,ed. David Knowles,trans.Henry Bettenson(Harmondsworth,Eng., 1972), 16.11; forthe rabbinictradition,see Genesis Rabbah,in MidrashRabbah,trans.H. Freedman (London, 1983), 1:36-37. For another Renaissance figureof the Africankingas a symbolof the universalityof the Christian message, see Thomas Middleton's 1613 masque, The Triumphof Truth,in which the of a "kingof the Moors" epitomizesthe "triumphof truth" conversionto Christianity announced in the masque's title.His visitto England is a modern epiphany narrative: "Nor could our desires resttillwe were led /Unto thisplace, where those good spirits in TheWorks ofThomasMiddleton, ofTruth, were bred"; Thomas Middleton,TheTriumph ed. A. H. Bullen (New York, 1964), 7:248. Samuel Chew commentson the masque in and theRose: Islamand EnglandDuringtheRenaissance(1937, reprint:New TheCrescent York, 1965), 463-65. The Ham storyhas received much play in recent criticismof Othelloas a primalscene of Renaissance racismin Newman,"Femininityand the Monstrous,"146-47; Barthelemy,BlackFace, 3; and Little,"PrimalScene," 308. I have not seen mention,however,of the waythatShakespeare stagesthe "flood"near Cyprusas replacing Ham with the typologicalantidote to the Old Testamentstory,effectively Balthazar. 15. Shell,Money,49. 16. The foundationsof thishumanistreading of race in Othellowere laid byEldred Jones, who argued thatthe firstscenes of the playintroduceus to Othello throughthejaundiced eyes of Lago in order to correcthis contaminatinglanguage withthe figurecut byOthello himself,and byG. K. Hunter,who demonstratedthattheuniversalistdream of a world Christianityis what makes possible act one's judicious weighingof Lago's Countrymen, conventionalstereotypesagainstOthello's naturaldignity;Jones,Othello's 87-93; Hunter,"Othello and Colour Prejudice,"49. 17. The period antelegemdates fromAdam to Moses, sub legefromMoses to Christ,and sub gratia from Christ onward; Howard Hibbard, Michelangelo,2d ed. (New York, 1974), 99-125. 18. John Pory,"A summarie discourse of the manifold Religions professed in Africa," & Description ofAfrica(1600), trans.John Pory, appended to Leo Africanus,TheHistory ed. RobertBrown (London, 1896), 3:1001-50. 19. ThePolicyoftheTurkish Empire(London, 1597), 15. 20. On Arab genealogyin Christianexegesis,see Norman Daniels, Islamand theWest:The Makingofan Image(Edinburgh, 1960), 128. On the reading of Pharaoh and Herod as 390, 395. Muslims,see Chew,Crescent, 21. Bernard Lewis,Race and Colorin Islam(New York, 1970), 1-28. 22. See Lynda Boose, "Othello'sHandkerchief:'The Recognizance and Pledge of Love,"' Renaissance5, no. 3 (Autumn 1975): 372-73. EnglishLiterary 23. For Othello's identificationwith an angry or untempered justice, see also Othello 2.3.69-72 and 5.1.1-3. In an unpublished lecture,Joseph Chaney has productively God"; Joseph Chaney,"OthellinkedOthello'sjealousyto thatof the "Judeo-Christian South lo'sJealousyand the TriangleofDesire" (lecturedeliveredat Indiana University, Bend, Ind., March 1994). Monogamyand monotheismare firmlylinkedin theJewish tradition,forexample in the keyingof the commandmentagainstidolatryto the parallel commandmentagainst adulteryin the adjoining tablet;Avroham Chaim Feuer, Anthologized A New Translation withCommentary AseresHadibroslTheTenCommandments: OthelloCircumcised:Shakespeare and the Pauline Discourse of Nations 87 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 88 fromTalmudic,Midrashic,and RabbinicSources(New York, 1981), 33. Boose notes the Deuteronomic sources forthe "sacrifice"of an adulterouswoman,but does not single out the specificallyOld Testamentprovenanceof the law (Deuteronomybeing an especiallycharged textin thetypologicaleconomyofMerchant);Boose, "Othello's Handkerchief,"372. As editorDavid Bevingtonnotes,the Quarto gives"Indian" (selected in mostmodern editions), but the Folio gives "Ludean," chosen by some editors and critics;Othello, 126 n. Criticswho prefer"base Ludean" include Richard S. Veit,"'Like the Base Judean': A Renaissance10, no. 3 EnglishLiterary Defense of an Oft-RejectedReading in Othello," (Autumn 1980), and Gordon Braden, who reads Othelloin the context of HerodAnger's and theSenecanTradition: Mariam dramas; Gordon Braden, RenaissanceTragedy Privilege(New Haven, Conn., 1985), 153-71. Edward Snow provides a powerfuldefenseof retainingboth readings; Edward Snow,"Sexual Anxietyand the Male Order of Things in Othello,"Shakespeare Quarterly 26 (1975): 412; citingVeit,he points out that"the word 'tribe'is never used in connectionwithIndians in Shakespeare. It primarilyconnotes'clan' forhim,oftenin connectionwiththe 'tribesof theworld"' (412). 195-96, makes a strongcase for"Ludean,"but thenchooses "Indian" Fiedler,Stranger, instead.Josephus'saccountsof the Herod-Mariamromanceare excerptedin Elizabeth ed. BarryWellerand MargaretW. ofMariam:TheFair QueenofJewry, Cary'sTheTragedy Ferguson (Berkeley,1994). See St. Paul: "If it had not been forthe law,I should not have known sin"; Rom. 7.7. Dympna Callaghan providesa relatedreadingofthe Herod-Mariam storyin her interpretationof Cary's TragedieofMariam;Callaghan, however,emphasizes not the typological splitbetween the intransigentmodernJew and the successfulJewishconvert (the Esau-Jacob pair), but ratherthe "racialization"or blackeningof Herod and the concomitantwhiteningof Mariam. Crudelyput, in Callaghan's reading,racial difference precedes and governsreligiousdifference;Dympna Callaghan, "Re-readingElizin Hendricks and Parker, abeth Cary's The TragedieofMariam,Faire QueeneofJewry," In myreading,religiousdifferenceprecedes and governs "Race,"and Writing. Women, racial difference. Snow,"Sexual Anxiety,"412. Race,RenaissanceDrama,48; Parker, 169; Loomba, Gender, Braden, RenaissanceTragedy, "Fantasiesof 'Race' and 'Gender,"' 98. Boose, "Racial Discourse,"40. In Rom. 4, Paul notes thatthe declarationof Abraham's faithin Genesis 15.6 ("And he believedthe Lord; and he reckoneditto himas righteousness")precedes byseveral chapters God's institutionof the rite of circumcision(Gen. 17.11). From this,Paul argues that Abraham "received circumcisionas a sign or seal of the righteousness whichhe had byfaithwhilehe was stilluncircumcised"(Rom. 4.11). In a related argument,Boyarin,RadicalJew,37, cites midrashimthatdepict circumcision as a writingof God's name on the body. and theJews(New York, 1996), 117. James Shapiro, Shakespeare PolicyoftheTurkish Empire,15. Ibid., 23. In Islam, circumcisionis a customratherthan a law,though I have not seen thispointacknowledgedin the Elizabethanliteratureon Islam, whichgenerallyassimilates the Moslem practiceto the more familiarJewishone. 443-44. Chew,Crescent, ChristopherMarlowe, TheJewofMalta, in Russell A. Fraser and Norman C. Rabkin, REPRESENTATIONS eds., Drama oftheEnglishRenaissance,vol. 1, TheTudorPeriod(New York, 1976), 22527 (emphasis added). Shake38. EditorsFraserand Rabkinnotetheborrowing;ibid.,276 n. In TitusAndronicus, speare would clarifyMarlowe'sallusiveconflationof the twoidentitiesbysimplynamthe familiarfatherforthe obscure son. ing his Moor "Aaron,"substituting OthelloCircumcised:Shakespeare and the Pauline Discourse of Nations 89