Melissa Wilcox,
"Bodily Transgressions: Ritual and Agency in Self-Injury"
(page 5 of 6)
Self-Injury and the Religious Body in Pain
As well as adding to our perspectives on ritual, the study of
self-injury relates directly to the study of religious ritual in the
context of the religious infliction of pain. Glucklich points out that
self-injury "is extremely pervasive in rites of mourning across the
world."[57]
It also appears in penance and purification, in offering and
sacrifice, in initiation, and in the asceticism of some religious
adepts. Religious self-injury differs from non-religious self-injury in
some important ways, including the greater likelihood of community
approval and comprehension. I don't intend to argue that religious and
secular self-injury have the same psychological origins; however, I do
think that the phenomenological similarities bear further
exploration.
Glucklich argues that "in its relation to pain, the goal of religious
life is not to bring anesthesia, but to transform the pain that causes
suffering into a pain that leads to insight, meaning, and even
salvation."[58]
"The self," he adds, "emerges out of the violence and
out of the hurtful feedback it generates."[59]
Scarry offers a slightly
different perspective, arguing that religious self-injury remakes the
world: "The self-flagellation of the religious ascetic ... is not ... an act of
denying the body ... but a way of so emphasizing the body that the contents
of the world are cancelled and the path is clear for the entry of an
unworldly, contentless force."[60]
Religious self-injury seems to
operate within the same ambivalence as its secular relative; in both
cases the practitioner is seeking meaning—even if insight and
salvation are less common goals among those who self-injure outside of a
religious context—and in both, violence and pain in some way create or
open a path to reality. Indeed, Glucklich comments that secular
self-injurers "often ... sound like religious [self-injurers] without the
theology," and goes on to say that "if anything, in its complexity and
ambiguity, the inner world of [secular] self-hurters more closely
resembles that of mystics and other technicians of the sacred who
acquire, or claim to acquire, 'spiritual' power by austerities and
discipline."[61]
Furthermore, religious self-injury has a complicated relationship to
gender. As Bynum points out, in medieval Christian mysticism, "illness
or recurrent pain was ... more apt to be given religious significance in
women's lives than in men's."[62]
This was true for a number of reasons,
including that women had little to give up as ascetics aside from food
and bodily integrity[63],
and that the culture of the time associated
women with body, and through body with the incarnation of
Christ.[64]
Yet in other contexts, especially when religious pain is considered a
mark of advanced religious abilities, it is the sole province of men.
Associated with the gendered body, reinforcing the body's gender, ritual
pain can be read as a technology of gender.
Technologies of the Sacred
Might religious self-injury be more, though, than simply a technology
of gender or, more broadly, a technology of the body? Does its
association with the sacred complicate the relationships of power found
in ritual? I would propose that it does, and furthermore that religious
ritual comprises what one might call a "technology of the sacred."
Technologies of the self are practical ways in which the self is
brought into being, shaped, and maintained. They're the means through
which power comes to expression in the everyday bodily practices and
existence of the subject, and they're also the means through which such
subjects redeploy power to undermine existing structures of domination.
Technologies of gender are technologies of the self that relate
specifically to gender, that create the structures of gender and that
through gender bring the self into being. Technologies of the sacred,
then, might be defined as those practical, religious ways in which the
self is brought into being, shaped, and maintained, by or in the face of
structures of power. They would include the ways in which social power
comes to expression in the everyday sacred practices and experiences of
the subject, and also—showing the ambiguity in self-injury as a
technology of the self and a technology of the sacred—the religious
ways in which such subjects redeploy power to undermine existing
structures of domination. Technologies of the sacred can also be
understood as those practices that bring a sense of the sacred into
being, that construct the sacred, and that shape the self in response to
such experiences of the sacred. In this way, self-injury as a technology
of the sacred evokes an experience of the sacred, marks that experience
clearly on the body, and at the same time reinforces—or, in some
cases, subverts, or both—structures of power and domination.
The concept of technologies of the sacred can contribute to our
theoretical understanding of the relationship between religion and
power—a relationship currently undertheorized. I would suggest, for
instance, that technologies of the sacred can also serve as effective
technologies of gender, structuring the self into socially appropriate
gender hierarchies but also providing the space for resistance to those
hierarchies. Many theorists of ritual have already noted the ways in
which it reinforces social hierarchies, even when, as in the case of
traditional Mardi Gras celebrations, it purports to overturn them. Less
work has been done on the connections between the sacred and
subversion.[65]
However, if we view the sacred as a conduit of social
power and resistance through bodily techniques, we have new tools with
which to understand the relationship between ritual, the sacred, the
self, and society.
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