The androgyne, whether as a symbol, a concept, or a bodily reality, appears to be employed in different and sometimes apparently contradictory ways within gnostic discourse. On the one hand, the heavenly father himself is an androgyne (Holy Book of the Great Invisible Spirit 51-52); the divine Barbelo, herself, is a "mother-father" and a "thrice-named androgyne" (Apocryphon of John 12.1-8), and Adam can only long for his ungendered days, when s/he was higher than the creator god (Apocalypse of Adam 64.5-65.25). On the other hand, we also learn that Ialdabaoth himself, that same evil material creator, the most abject entity in gnostic myth, is also an androgyne (Hypostasis of the Archons 94.8-19). This apparent discrepancy serves as the focal point of this paper, which aims to explain the complex, albeit largely consistent, use of the concept of the queered gender in gnostic myth. By reading this myth according to its internal order of events, I attempt to show that gnostic androgyny, far from being a ratification of Greco-Roman discourse (as has been sometimes suggested), is actually a subversion of this very discourse, constructed so as to reify the gnostic disapproval of an important Greco-Roman cultural premise - one that has been aptly defined by David Halperin as "the ancients' deeply felt and somewhat anxiously defended sense of congruence between a person's gender, sexual practices, and social identity" (:23). The androgyne, whether as a symbol, a concept, or a bodily reality, appears to be employed in different and sometimes apparently contradictory ways within gnostic discourse. On the one hand, the heavenly father himself is an androgyne (Holy Book of the Great Invisible Spirit 51-52); the divine Barbelo, herself, is a "mother-father" and a "thrice-named androgyne" (Apocryphon of John 12.1-8), and Adam can only long for his ungendered days, when s/he was higher than the creator god (Apocalypse of Adam 64.5-65.25). On the other hand, we also learn that Ialdabaoth himself, that same evil material creator, the most abject entity in gnostic myth, is also an androgyne (Hypostasis of the Archons 94.8-19). This apparent discrepancy serves as the focal point of this paper, which aims to explain the complex, albeit largely consistent, use of the concept of the queered gender in gnostic myth. By reading this myth according to its internal order of events, I attempt to show that gnostic androgyny, far from being a ratification of Greco-Roman discourse (as has been sometimes suggested), is actually a subversion of this very discourse, constructed so as to reify the gnostic disapproval of an important Greco-Roman cultural premise - one that has been aptly defined by David Halperin as "the ancients' deeply felt and somewhat anxiously defended sense of congruence between a person's gender, sexual practices, and social identity" (:23).
مجموعه
تاريخ نشر
2014
توصيف ظاهري
509-524
عنوان
Numen
شماره جلد
61/5-6
شماره استاندارد بين المللي پياييندها
1568-5276
اصطلاحهای موضوعی کنترل نشده
اصطلاح موضوعی
androgyne
اصطلاح موضوعی
Early Christianity
اصطلاح موضوعی
gender
اصطلاح موضوعی
Gnosticism
اصطلاح موضوعی
queer
اصطلاح موضوعی
sexuality
نام شخص به منزله سر شناسه - (مسئولیت معنوی درجه اول )