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Monsters & Madonnas: The Roots of Christian Anti-Semitism
 
 
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Monsters & Madonnas: The Roots of Christian Anti-Semitism [Paperback]

Judith Taylor Gold (Author), Joseph Gold (Editor)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 1999
A second revised edition of this book which challenges traditional views that trace the source of Christian anti-Semitism to the presentation of Jews in the first four books of the New Testament, contending that the unflattering depiction of Jews in the gospels and other Christian writings is the result, not the cause, of Christian anti-Semitism.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 220 pages
  • Publisher: Syracuse Univ Pr (Sd); Rev Sub edition (June 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0815605838
  • ISBN-13: 978-0815605836
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,284,934 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Explosive analysis, March 13, 2010
This review is from: Monsters & Madonnas: The Roots of Christian Anti-Semitism (Paperback)
Reading this controversial book will be a painful, even harrowing experience to some. The great philosopher Alfred North Whitehead claimed that symbols evoke loyalty to vague notions fundamental to humanity's spiritual nature. He argued that symbolism needs to be evaluated continuously and modified by new forms of expression. Old symbols must be remolded in accordance with changes in social structure. The ceremonies and rituals associated with symbolic concepts tend to remain unchanged or get frozen in time while their interpretations fluctuate constantly.

Instinct that is not expressed becomes toxic as it festers underground, unknown and unexamined by the light of reason. Symbolic transference may involve arbitrary and malevolent attributions; both rigidity and disruption lead to human sacrifice. Preserving a free society thus requires respect for tradition combined with the constant reappraisal and revision of symbolic codes. Michael Polanyi's view of the role of tradition in his little classic Science, Faith and Society is highly instructive in this regard.

Gold investigates the phenomenon of the monster in the collective subconscious through its persistent expression in the realm of superstition and myth. She discusses the different forms of the monster figure and its attributes in global folklore, literature and the modern phenomenon of aliens & UFO's, identifying certain common characteristics like therianthropy, metamorphoses, size and invisibility.

Then she deconstructs the horror story as regards setting, the nature of time, the triad of main characters, auxiliary characters and plot. Her research is quite thorough with reference to and quotes from inter alia Dracula, Frankenstein, the Wendigo, The Willows, The Black Seal, Carmilla & The Fall of the House of Usher. Shown to be closely connected to the promotion of fertility and representing a synthesis of motherhood and virginity, the goddess figure is always accompanied by a young male deity. Examples include Ishtar & Tammuz, Anat & Baal and Isis & Osiris. Quotes from scripture, Egyptian hieroglyphics, Herodotus and various popes enliven the narrative.

The next three chapters analyze the Christ story as regards setting, history, the politics of Roman domination, the various strains of Judaism prevalent at the time and the Hellenic religio-philosophical influence. A chapter each is devoted to the Messiah and to the intertestamental writings which comprise the Apocrypha, the Pseudepigrapha and the Dead Sea Scrolls, followed by a comparison of setting, characterization & plot in the horror story and the gospel accounts.

The nature of relationships, type of sexuality in the encounters between characters and the disguise mechanisms in these texts are dissected in detail, again with numerous references and quotes from the classics, including Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. The chapter on incest covers mankind's biological & psychological development; as we have vestigial organs like tonsils & appendix we may also have vestigial behavior patterns that are mainly latent. The incest taboo is universal and powerful but the gods and royalty have always been exempt. Here the author also reveals the complex mechanisms employed to disguise incest in the texts.

The wedding at Cana as recounted in the gospel of John holds the key to many a mystery and the author examines every aspect of it in minute detail. What emerges is quite astonishing and impossible to deny; underneath a Judaistic veneer an ancient tale unfolds. In the chapter on pornography, Gold explains the relationship between horror and pornography and their similarity of structure and content. The occurrence of primal sexuality in a sort of "dreamtime" characterizes both pornography and horror.

The final chapter on Antisemitism connects all the threads. This plague existed in the ancient pre-christian world but took a turn for the worse after Constantine Christianity was adopted by the Roman Empire in A.D. 394. Quotes from John's gospel, the church fathers, a selection of popes, Martin Luther, Shakespeare, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, passion plays and 20th century literature expose its similarity of expression down the ages.

Judith Taylor Gold stripped the monster of its camouflage in the book of John and tracked it to its lair within the dialectics of the collective subconscious. In the epilogue she proposes some remedial measures to counteract the mental disease but I suspect she knows they will never be implemented in our era. No doubt most theologians are aware of some uncomfortable truths but the ordinary believer in this faith which is dying in its European cradle would react with shock and disorientation.

Faith is a profoundly emotional issue with its own dynamics as Eric Hoffer makes clear in The True Believer, a seminal study on the nature of belief and mass movements. And as Whitehead observed, both rigidity and disruption may lead to upheaval and mass murder. Another valid insight is that of the metaphysician Ernest Holmes who warned against destroying/undermining a person's faith if that faith gives them comfort and helps them to seek what is good and right: "Every person's religion is an answer to the cry of the soul for something which is real, something which may be relied upon - a resting place for which everyone instinctively feels a need."

In the broader context there are some flaws of omission. The first is the role of Amalek which is superbly dealt with in The Dawn by Yoram Hazony. Secondly, the book focuses on one, albeit the largest, strain of Christianity in which Mariolatry represents a continuation of goddess worship. Of course the subject is not within its scope but the question needs be asked why a movement like Calvinism was less susceptible to the ancient hatred than most other forms of the religion. Finally, what explains the immunity of Christian Zionism, especially the complete & total immunity of the non-proselytizing branches of this version of Christianity?

Further valuable information is available in Christian Antisemitism: A History of Hate by William Nicholls, Why the Jews?: The Reason for Antisemitism by Dennis Prager and Joseph Telushkin and A Psychology of Hope by Kalman J Kaplan and Matthew B Schwartz. Madonnas & Monsters contains 19 pages of notes with additional valuable information plus an extensive bibliography and concludes with an index.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars From a Pagan perspective..., January 4, 2001
By 
Chapulina R (Tovarischi Imports, USA/RUS) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Monsters & Madonnas: The Roots of Christian Anti-Semitism (Paperback)
It's certainly true that this book will not increase interfaith rapport between Christianity and Judaism. It explores the very pagan roots of modern Christianity, its parallels with the ubiquitous dying/ressurrecting god-king parables of ancient Gentile (pagan) peoples. Since Biblical times, the Jews strove to keep their religion pure, whereas Christianity coopted the symbolism, rituals, deities, and beliefs of the peoples it sought to convert. Although this is hardly revelation to anyone knowledgeable of theological history, Christian readers will be alienated by the accusatory comparison of their faith to heathenism. Nor will Pagan readers find eddification; in the view of "Monsters and Madonnas", their faith equates with demonism. However, the book exposes much of the hypocrisy of the modern rightwing Christian-supremicist movement which vilifies and seeks to politically suppress polytheistic faiths. The author presents her evidence and conclusions without sympathy or sugarcoating, and the result is certainly not very palatable. But that does not lessen the book's worthiness.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Monsters and Madonnas: Syracuse author sheds new light on anti-Semitism, January 23, 2009
This review is from: Monsters & Madonnas: The Roots of Christian Anti-Semitism (Paperback)
The following was reproduced with permission from Syracuse University:

On Mother's Day, 2003, Judith Taylor Gold '55 got an unexpected call at home from Ken Jacobs, the experimental filmmaker. He was so smitten by Gold's new book, "Monsters & Madonnas: The Roots of Christian Anti-Semitism," he tracked her down through directory assistance. "It was a very unusual thing for me to do," Jacobs says in retrospect, speaking by phone from New York City. "I think I kinda' frightened her. But as a Jew and someone who is interested in Jewish history, I was really impressed with the book. I had to talk with her."

During a recent lunch meeting on campus, Gold admitted to being startled by the call, but not surprised. Her book challenges the traditional view of the source of Christian anti-Semitism being the unflattering depiction of Jews in the first four books of the New Testament. By the time Jacobs reached her, it had already drawn dozens of impassioned letters and phone calls. "I've always been interested in religion and in why the Jewish people were singled out to die," she says between sips of coffee. "You're not going to have to convince many older people there's something in [the Book of] John that promotes anti-Semitism. But in the ambiguity of Jesus as a Jewish man or Christian god, they're probably not going to see it. But younger or more open-minded people like Ken Jacobs might."

Across the table, Joseph Gold, her editor and husband of 53 years, who also happens to be founding director of the Syracuse Cancer Research Institute, nods in agreement. "People call us, sometimes late at night, after they've finished Judy's book, saying they've had `an experience,'" he says. "The more they read it, the more they think Judy is right." Drawing me closer, he lowers his voice and continues. "This woman may have unlocked a secret that theologians have been cracking their skulls over for thousands of years."

Gold contends that the depiction of Jews in the gospels is the result--not the cause--of Christian anti-Semitism. She traces the phenomenon to ancient civilizations that took offense to the Jews' "difference"-namely, their belief in one God, their observation of circumcision and dietary laws, and their condemnation of child sacrifice and fertility rites. In a review appearing in "The Forward," a Jewish weekly, former "60 Minutes" producer Joseph Wershba terms the book as "controversial, psychological, original--and terrifying." He also maintains that Gold is not alone in her depiction of Jews' abhorrence of fertility religions. "As the old pagan religions died out, many of their fertility rites did not-and certain pagan practices were continued in the new religion that would soon spread across the Middle East and western world: Christianity. Some of these rites were incestuous in nature."

Gold parts company with many scholars in her Oedipal interpretation of the Christ story by focusing on the wedding at Cana, where Jesus famously turns water into wine (John 2:1-11). She asserts that the wedding was actually a pagan fertility rite, involving the "mother goddess" Mary and her "deity son" Jesus--as the actual bride and bridegroom. The Bible's dualistic portrayal of Jesus as Christian God and Jewish man is at the heart of her claim. "As God, Jesus was exempt from the incest taboo. Incest was his divine prerogative. But as a Jewish man, it was the ultimate crime," she says unflinchingly. "Therefore, it was the earthly representation of Jesus who was subject to retribution--as were his mortal counterparts--throughout history. Anti-Semitism is the perception of the Jew as a `monster' [incest figure]."

Some may think this is pretty heady stuff for an author whose formal training goes no further than a dual major in religion and philosophy as an SU undergraduate. But, according to Joseph Gold, don't let the lack of a Ph.D. fool you. "She's a person of many abilities, probably a genius in her own way." Several prominent people agree. To date, "Monsters & Madonnas"--published in 1988 by New Amsterdam Books and revised in 1999 by Syracuse University Press--has drawn praise from the Rev. Edward H. Flannery, an outspoken critic of anti-Semitism, who says that the book "deserves serious thought," and from literary lion Norman Cousins. "What makes this book so remarkable," he writes, "is not just its highly original approach to a problem of blazing concern, but its combination of genuine scholarship and literary talent." Renowned attorney and author Alan Dershowitz echoes these sentiments, hailing the book a "must-read" for all Christians and Jews. "It is a brilliant and provocative explanation of what was previously inexplicable: the pervasiveness and intractability of anti-Semitism."

Karen DeCrow G'72, a leading feminist attorney and former president of the National Organization of Women, says she was overwhelmed by the "intellectualism" of the book. "Judy is what I would classify as a public intellectual," DeCrow said during a recent phone conversation. "She's a scholarly person who knows a lot about not only literature and religion, but also psychology and history." Having known Gold more than 20 years, she recalls taking her course, "Monsters & Madonnas," through SU's University College. "It was fascinating to watch this socially retiring person take command of the class with this unusual take on anti-Semitism. I've always wondered why she has been fascinated by this subject."



Gold's interest in the Bible and in religion stems from an insatiable thirst for knowledge. Born the daughter of a prominent Utica dentist, Gold grew up in Syracuse, spending much of her childhood in the library. She managed to skip a grade at Nottingham High School and enroll at SU at age 16. She continued reading voraciously in college and distinguished herself as the first woman inducted into the SU chapter of the national honor society for religion, Theta Chi Beta.

During her sophomore year, she met Joseph, a bright, handsome medical student at SUNY Upstate Medical University, and the couple married in 1955. For the next six years, they bounced around the country, as Joseph established his career and she held a variety of jobs. "Being a liberal arts major qualified me to do many things," she says, flicking her short auburn hair. During a stint in California, Gold worked as a secretary for the Unitarian Society of Berkeley in a celebrated case involving attorney Melvin Belli. She also apprenticed under future "New Yorker" film critic Pauline Kael and launched a Christmas card business called Judy Gold Enterprises. At Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio, where Joseph was integral to the Project Mercury Astronaut Selection Program, she taught junior high English and history, and briefly served as an editorial assistant for the "Dayton Journal Herald." In 1961, the Golds returned permanently to Syracuse to raise their two sons, Skye '91 and Shannon. Gold reactivated her company, and, in four years, it became one of the Northeast's largest suppliers of business-to-business holiday cards.

One autumn day in 1963, while working at the now-defunct Addis Company department store, Gold had an epiphany. "A friend of mine came in and bought a Christmas card showing Joseph and a very pregnant Mary in the flight into Egypt," she reminiscences. "I remember turning over the order form and, on the back, beginning to draw triangles--lots of triangles--whose points represented triad relationships." She produces a pencil, and, on a paper napkin, sketches several triangles, indicating the Holy Trinity (e.g., Father, Son, and Holy Spirit), the Earthly Trinity (e.g., Jesus, Mary, and Joseph), and the Freudian Trinity (e.g., Id, Ego, and Super-Ego). "Later that night, I told Joe, `I think I know what the Christmas card really means,'" she adds, referring to the Christ story's Freudian overtones. "That's what gave me the idea for 'Monsters & Madonnas.'"

Gold quit her business in 1965, just about the time her husband was creating the Syracuse Cancer Research Institute, and she spent the next two decades working on her book. (For years, her "day job" has been serving as the institute's associate director.) The bulk of her research was carried out at the SU and Cornell libraries, as well as at the former main branch of Syracuse Public Library, whose smell and hushed atmosphere Gold recalls with fond pleasure. It was in the downtown library, one fateful day in the late '70s, that Gold struck on the Oedipal overlay of the wedding at Cana. Inspired by the interpretations of Rudolf Bultmann, a German theologian who "demythicized" singular events of the gospels, she revisited the Book of John through a more critical lens. "It dawned on me that the wedding at Cana, with its abundance of wine, was in reality a pagan fertility rite. At that time, Jewish people could participate in pagan cults, which were open and democratic. But times have changed."



Part of the allure of "Monsters & Madonnas" is its shock factor; horror, incest, and pornography can make for lively reading. In a thorough review in the "Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts," Texas Tech University professor James Whitlark points out that since Gold's Oedipal theory is difficult to prove, she doesn't try. "Instead, she explores the peripheries of her subject ... and proceeds to the easier task of demonstrating that there has been much anti-Semitism," he writes. The book holds a certain attraction to Catholics, admits Gold, but the response has been cooler among some Jews and Protestants. Zachary Braiterman, associate professor of religion at SU and an expert in modern Judaism, labels Gold's theory as "theo-psychological speculation .... It's an interesting thesis, but I'm a little uncomfortable with it because it's... Read more ›
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The monsters are very old. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
metaphysical figure, metaphysical encounter, fertility drama, triad configuration, appositional relationship, psychological incest, auxiliary characters, monster figure, cult ideology, family triad, aberrant sexuality, earthly figure, philosophical dualism, triad figures, triad members, fertility religions
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
God the Father, Holy Spirit, Old Testament, John the Baptist, Holy Land, Pope Pius, Son of God, The Wendigo, Victor Frankenstein, Jonathan Harker, Count Dracula, Divine Plan, The Shuttered Room, New Testament, Queen of Heaven, God Himself, Virgin Mary, Divine Will, Will of the Father, God's Will, Dead Sea, Roman Empire, The Beckoning Fair One, Doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, Kingdom Come
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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