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Christianity's Forgetting

Hawthorne, Sian

Authors



Abstract

This essay addresses how the long process of the “Aryanisation” of Christian Europe in which it forgot its own provenance is conveyed in the history of the family tree. It traces the image of the family tree as it was extracted from the realm of Hebrew biblical narrative, became the means of representing Indo-European linguistic differentiation and then, finally, Aryan racial superiority and separation from the (conjured) figure of the Semite. The family tree exemplifies a more generalisable pattern of the forgetfulness of Christianity’s debts to other modalities, ontologies, and narratives in the quest to establish itself as pure, singular, monolingual, and monochrome. The Tree of Jesse serves as a particular and important example of the patrilineal and fraternal affiliations and disaffiliations in the trajectory of the genealogy of the family tree, motivated by desires to support claims to pedigree and patrimony, reversed from a model of descent to one of ascent with the European “Aryans.”

Citation

Hawthorne, S. (2015). Christianity's Forgetting. ReOrient, 1(1), 43-50. https://doi.org/10.13169/reorient.1.1.0043

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Sep 1, 2015
Deposit Date Oct 25, 2015
Publicly Available Date Sep 2, 2115
Journal ReOrient: The Journal of Critical Muslim Studies
Print ISSN 2055-5601
Electronic ISSN 2055-561X
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 1
Issue 1
Pages 43-50
DOI https://doi.org/10.13169/reorient.1.1.0043
Keywords Aryanism, Christianity, Derrida, filiation, genealogy, memory, anamnesis, deconstruction, teleology, Tree of Jesse