Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Introduction to This Site

Welcome to the Killing God Blog everyone! 

We apologize for the intense title of this site, but it was the title of the article up for our consideration this week, so we thought we why not go for the gold. 
We hope that you will find this blog useful as we discuss Professor Straight's article. In it you will find things like suggestions for further reading, short passages from other works that might be helpful as we wrestle with Straight's article, and links to websites that relate to the ideas discussed in "Killing God: Exceptional Moments in the Colonial Missionary Encounter."

For starters you might find Belinda Straight's personal website to of interesting. 

Also, you might like to explore the website of the Samburu County Council here:


Interest piqued? We hope so. And as our presentation progresses we hope that this site will help you get more and more involved in a continuing discussion about the issues addressed in Straight's article. Our introductory comments and questions for small-group-discussions will be posted on this website. Also, you will have a chance to post responses on this website in class as our presentation and discussions progress. We will of course ask you in person what your small groups discussed, but you can also post something in the comment section after each post if you would like to make additional arguments.

Thank you for visiting our blog! We hope it helps you to appreciate Professor Straight's article.

How To Kill God...Or, Methods of Metaphysical Conflict


Methods of Metaphysical Struggle in Straight’s article

            Straight outlines multiple methods of metaphysical struggle with indigenous gods in Africa.  The most obvious forms of this struggle come as material violence; “divinities are hanged, burned, or killed outright (when they come in the shape of animals)” (847).  The major example in this article is Scudder shooting into the cave of a god known as Nkai killing some hyenas and desecrating the sacred site.  Straight gives another example of animals being killed for this purpose.  In one town there were local lizards that were believed to be protectors of the town, and the missionaries had the lizards chased out of town and killed to “prove” the illegitimacy of their divinity.
As another example, Straight tells of a nineteenth century missionary, John Williams, who enacted violence upon indigenous gods through the methods of hanging and burning.  Williams and other missionaries would expose the deities and publically exhibit them often from their pulpits.  After the “idols” were desecrated through their exposure and hanging, they met their ultimate end through burning or display in British missionary museums.

Medical science was used to disprove the existence of traditional gods through supposed rational deconstruction.  African deities were “scientifically” explained away by “proving by living demonstration the fallacy, fatuity, and powerlessness of the superstitious methods of treatment employed by the medicine man” (p. 864).  Scudder engaged in dispensing medicine, because he aimed to “win souls by separating them from bodies, thereby imparting a dualistic ontology by which the body could be healed by “rational” means separate from a soul that needed to be saved by faith” (846).

            Christian missionaries also resorted to bold self-contradiction to “prove” the power of the Christian God over the African traditional deities.  W.F.P. Burton, a contemporary of Scudder, recounts in his history of missionary work that when his mission was being built the “native” workers took lightning and the unearthing of a human skeleton as bad omens and refused to continue their work.  Burton dismissed this as superstitious and “heathen darkness” even though the building indeed suffered damage in a tornado soon after the perceived omens.  However, the missionary’s bold self-contradiction emerged when more bad weather threatened, the missionaries kneeled in prayer to God, and the storm passed without causing damage.  “Had the tornado wreaked Kafuke’s revenge only in the credulous eyes of the ‘natives,’ while this time God truly prevailed in protecting a chapel?  Was this another case of ‘bloodless victory,’ of the Judeo-Christian God triumphing over foreign divinities?” (847).


Methods of Metaphysical Conflict in Achebe's Novels

Interestingly, Achebe’s novels are filled with examples of the principles Straight is laying out, particularly her methods of metaphysical struggle. We see obvious examples of metaphysical struggle initiated by white missionaries, sure, but also by facets within traditional Igbo religion. While Straight focuses exclusively on the white “violence” done to the traditional metaphysical realities, Achebe’s literary format affords readers a more nuanced look at various perspectives of such incidents. Here are some examples:

In chapter 18 of Things Fall Apart, we see the villagers waiting to see the Christians struck down for building their church in the Evil Forest, and the outcasts are afraid to cut their hair for fear of death. Mr. Kiaga rationally deconstructs both beliefs, saying “You fear that you will die. Why should that be? How are you different from other men who shave their hair” (157). When the church is built, the outcasts cut their hair and still no one dies - something significant happens to the peoples’ perceptions of metaphysical realities.  
 
And then there is the material violence as demonstrated in Things Fall Apart when the over-zealous convert Enoch unmasks one of the egwugwu. In doing this, he has "has killed an ancestral spirit, and Umuofia was thrown into confusion" (186).


Perhaps the most dramatic act of divinicide within the Igbo communities themselves is when Akukalia destroys Ebo's ikenga, his god. This was an unthinkable act, the ultimate sacrilege...so heinous, in fact, that after Ebo killed Akukalia, Ebo's village sympathized with the murdered, saying "who would bear such a thing? What propitiation or sacrifice would atone for such sacrilege" (24)? Also indicative of the community’s own ability to commit divinicide comes when we hear a brief account reminding a village "of the fate of another deity that failed his people" (39). The townspeople of Aninta actually burnt one a deity and exiled the affiliated priest.

And then, of course, we have the instance of the sacred python. While not itself a god, the sacred python was just that - sacred, and prized by the diety Idemili (45). And though not killed, Oduche's capturing of the snake proved catastrophic in the village. Of course, everything started when a Christian convert named Mr. Goodcountry used rational deconstruction to convince the church that the python was not sacred, saying 'it is nothing but a snake, the snake that deceived our first mother, Eve. If you are afraid to kill it do not call yourself a Christian" (47). That rational deconstruction eventually led to the more dramatic material violence when a Christian killed a snake and Oduche captured one, intending for it to die. Interestingly, these events also demonstrate bold contradiction on the part of Mr. Goodcountry, for in the very act of assuring his people that the python was just a snake, and therefore did not hold spiritual powers, he cited its apparently remarkable ability to grow vocal chords and speak to Eve in the Garden of Eden.

These examples are all in the vein of Straight’s “exceptional moments” that she so emphatically focuses on. For her, these are the kinds of moments that define the memories and shape the “imaginaries” of those involved. However, I wonder if it  could also be said that the Igbo themselves enacted a sort of slow divinicide. In Arrow of God, Ezeulu is constantly lamenting the younger generation's turning from the gods. This is highlighted when Umuaro decides to go to war against the warning of the priest of Ulu; "Umuaro challenged the deity which laid the foundation of their villages" (15). Straight seems to want to emphasize the dramatic, catatastrophic instances of divinicide, but what of the gradual encroachment of the new religion? Ezeulu himself "was becoming afraid that the new religion was like a leper. Allow him a handshake and he wants to embrace" (43). Perhaps both internal forces and external colonization forces acted over time on the Igbo traditional religions and culture.


Discussion Questions

For Straight, what is actually accomplished in metaphysical violence against the deities?  What does it mean for someone to blatantly and violently attack another’s divinity?  What does it mean for those whose divinity is being attacked?  Are there ways in which we still do this today in twenty-first century Christianity?

When the missionaries and colonizers in the Achebe novels attempted to "kill" deities, they seemed to be attempting to prove the nonexistence of the deity (as opposed to conquering an actual agent of power). Do you think this is how the Igbo interpreted it? Or, did they understand the white men as actually murdering their gods, demonstrating greater force than that possessed by the old deities? Are foreign acts of divinicide interpreted differently than internal acts of divinicide? Can these "native" acts even be properly termed divinicide?

Nkai versus Scudder's God


As Straight represents the Samburu ontology, their understanding is that Divinity is simultaneously One and capable of taking plural form.  Nkai is both immanent and transcendent, continues to be present in the world, and appears to people in various shapes. “There is some consistency to Nkai’s intervention in human affairs, however.  From a presentist Samburu perspective, Nkai continually gives birth to and nourishes the world and as such is a target of supplication and a source of joy.  Nkai also, however, presents Itself/Themselves as a perfect model for moral Samburu personhood, and in this respect Nkai’s presence is double-edged.  Nkai’s appearances can incarnate moral perfection to emulate, but Nkai can, as well, offer warnings and even bring harm as exemplary punishment for wrongdoing” (Straight, Miracles, 60).  Sacred sites are without exception tied to natural features of the landscape that Samburu find remarkable or special, including springs, rivers, mountains, and hill caves.  So Nkai is clearly immanently present; the cave into which Scudder shot was, for the Samburu, associated with continuous divine presence.
  One of Straight’s main points is that the Samburu ontology does not allow for a dualism between spirit and matter, while Scudder’s does.  Nkai is rain, and at the same time, Nkai is the human and animal forms which the Samburu report to encounter.  On the other hand, Scudder and his European companions did propound a Platonic, dualistic ontology, separating souls from bodies and spirit from matter, maintaining that God is in heaven, not in caves.  God may infuse matter with spirit and thus be continually present here and now, unlike for the Samburu, who hold that where Nkai appears “it is a case of spirit irreducible to matter.”  Scudder’s God is (apparently) strongly transcendent.
            In the metaphysical clash, Straight sees the missionaries as logically inconsistent – the uneven application of Cartesian logic and double standard for judging the merit of a religion/deity.  Thus, with the use of medicine, “He too (Scudder) was on a mission to win souls by winning bodies or, rather, to win souls by separating them from bodies, thereby imparting a dualistic ontology by which the body could be healed by “rational” means separate from a soul that needed to be saved by faith” (846).
This quote from her book might clarify some points in her article:
“I want to suggest that two very different ontologies have been competing with one another.  It is not (in any definitive way) that a masculine view of divinity has overcome a feminine (or, as I shall argue, a plural) one.  Nor is it that a white Nkai is replacing a Samburu one.  It is that the apparent similarities between two ontologies (Samburu and European) have obfuscated their differences, and, moreover, a Western proccupation with gender and race has occluded other, possibly more important for the Samburu, dimensions of divnity” (Straight, Miracles, 44-5).


Straight, Bilinda. Miracles and Extraordinary Experience in Northern Kenya. Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, 2007.


Discussion Questions:

1) Stright depicts Scudder's God as strongly transcendental and Samburu's Nkai as both immanent and transcendent.
   Do you think her depictions are accurate? Even if she is merely describing the Christianity of Scudder, do you think she gives a substantial enough picture of Scudder to be able to make such an assertion?  How would you evaluate the Igbo deities according to the transcendent/immanent dualism?

2) At witnessing/experiencing/hearing of Scudder's shooting at Naibor Keju and his subsequent death related to his gun play, what might the Samburus' shared imaginary be then?  (Poetic justice from Nkai?  Tragic accident?)  How might this affect the metaphysical struggle?  Do you see any similar case in the Achebe?

Monday, March 14, 2011

A Brief Metaphysical Primer

One thing that our group noticed about Straight’s article is that the vocabulary is pretty daunting. We found ourselves wondering, for instance, about the nature of the “metaphysical contact zone,” and puzzling over what Straight meant by “shared imaginary.”
So to help de-mystify this article, we thought we would offer a brief introduction to what people generally mean when they talk about metaphysics. Some of you may find this old-hat. But others may find it enlightening. At the very least, you can check out some of the secondary sources that we discuss in this entry to find out for yourself what “metaphysics” is all about.
You might, for instance, check out the original work on metaphysics by Aristotle, which you can access online here:
Interestingly, the name of this work comes from the title given to it by 1st century CE scholars in Alexandria. They were compiling a collection of Aristotle’s works, and when they came to the work we now all call The Metaphysics, they called it simply “The-after-the-physics-things” (ta meta ta physica), or more colloquially, the work that comes after the Physics (the title of another work by Aristotle).
That, at least, is the simplest explanation. Others argue that “ta meta ta physica” is not simply a title designating the place of the work in an anthology. It tells the reader about the content of the work – this is the work that goes beyond the things discussed in The Physics. And here one begins to get an idea of what Straight may be talking about when she uses the word metaphysics in her article. For the things that go beyond the things discussed in The Physics are what Aristotle might call “first causes.” These are the things that are not necessarily open to empirical investigation, but that nevertheless form the foundation of the world we see around us.
You can read more about these things in The Metaphysics itself (or at this post in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/metaphysics/), but for now we will simply point out that Aristotle describes these things that form the fundamental building blocks of the universe in various ways: at times he calls them substances, at times he seems to speak of them as though they were Plato’s forms or ideas, and at other times Aristotle calls the things that make up the world by the names of individual physical things (like this particular horse called Ed, for instance.)
But for all of the vagueness of Aristotle’s descriptions, it is clear that he thinks that these first causes, or substances, or ideas can be investigated through a reliable science. For him, there is a form of inquiry that allows humans to make judgments-of-truth about first causes, substances, and the things that are in themselves. By contrast, most modern thinkers (and it would appear that Bilinda Straight is a modern thinker in this sense) reject this last important step when speaking about metaphysics. Following Nietzsche’s arguments in the Gay Science (specifically section 344 in Essay 5 of that work, which we have included below, with important sections in bold) thinkers like Straight tend to base their arguments on the conviction that science and metaphysics ultimately depend upon groundless “presuppositions,” to use Nietzsche’s language. Judgments-of-truth about the essence or first-causes of a given human institution or any other thing that appears in the world are impossible. All judgments are merely “value judgments,” or, to use Straight’s language, judgments of the imagination, aka “imaginaries.”
So while Straight follows Aristotle (and Nietzsche) in arguing that there is something beyond the physical-world that is important to understand if one is to understand the world as we know it, she makes an important departure from Aristotle when she describes metaphysical convictions as the products of a war between conflicting, and ultimately arbitrary, metaphysical presuppositions or “imaginaries.” This, perhaps, is why Straight is so interested in tracking the conflict that arises between the metaphysical presuppositions of Scudder and the Samburu people. Such conflict, and the new imaginaries that result from it, determines how a given people – on both sides of a given conflict - will see their world, their God, and their social reality. When people “forget” about the conflict that preceded their temporarily static view of things, they can be said to share a religious world-view and way of being in the world. Straight calls such a static state a shared “habitus.” But when people engage in the process of killing one another’s Gods (which, though imagined and unreal, are all that exists for Nietzsche – recall Heidegger’s making explicit what Nietzsche left tacit when he said “God is dead; God is our only hope.”) that is when things really get interesting. When we can actually see people engaged in the strife and will to dominance that eventually sublimate into religious belief systems and “shared imaginaries.”
This, at least, is how some members of our group interpreted Straight’s use of metaphysical language. But what do you think?
Directions and questions for small groups:
As a group, read the first full paragraph in the second column on page 843 ("My suggestion here is that...").
- What is Straight saying here? In light of this paragraph, what is the significance of the incident in which Charles Scudder fired shots into a sacred space of the Samburu? How can this incident be interpreted as "metaphysical violence?"
Why, according to Straight, is a "shared imaginary" the result of the Scudder incident?  What does it mean, and why is it significant, that this incident is "exceptional?"


The Gay Science, Essay 5, Section 344.
How we, too, are still pious.—In science convictions have no rights of citizenship, as one says with good reason. Only when they decide to descend to the modesty of hypotheses, of a provisional experimental point of view, of a regulative fiction, they may be granted admission and even a certain value in the realm of knowledge—though always with the restriction that they remain under police supervision, under the police of mistrust.—But does this not mean, if you consider it more precisely, that a conviction may obtain admission to science only when it ceases to be a conviction? Would it not be the first step in the discipline of the scientific spirit that one would not permit oneself any more convictions?
Probably this is so; only we still have to ask: To make it possible for this discipline to begin, must there not be some prior conviction—even one that is so commanding and unconditional that it sacrifices all other convictions to itself? We see that science also rests on a faith; there simply is no science "without presuppositions." The question whether truth is needed must not only have been affirmed in advance, but affirmed to such a degree that the principle, the faith, the conviction finds expression: "Nothing is needed more than truth, and in relation to it everything else has only second-rate value."
This unconditional will to truth—what is it? Is it the will not to allow oneself to be deceived? Or is it the will not to deceive? For the will to truth could be interpreted in the second way, too—if only the special case "I do not want to deceive myself" is subsumed under the generalization "I do not want to deceive." But why not deceive? But why not allow oneself to be deceived?
Note that the reasons for the former principle belong to an altogether different realm from those for the second. One does not want to allow oneself to be deceived because one assumes it is harmful, dangerous, calamitous to be deceived. In this sense, science would be a long-range prudence, a caution, a utility; but one could object in all fairness: How is that? Is wanting not to allow oneself to be deceived really less harmful, less langerous, less calamitous? What do you know in advance of the character of existence to be able to decide whether the greater advantage is on the side of the unconditional mistrust or of the unconditionally trusting? But if both should be required, much trust as well as much mistrust, from where would science then be permitted to take its unconditional faith or conviction on which it rests, that truth is more important than any other thing, including every other conviction? Precisely this conviction could never have come into being if both tuth and untruth constantly proved to be useful which is the case. Thus—the faith in science, which after all exists undeniably, cannot owe its origin to such a calculus of utility; it must have originated in spite of the fact that the disutility and dangerousness of "the will to truth," of "truth at any price" is proved to it constantly. "At any price ': how well we understand these words once we have offered and slaughtered one faith after another on this altar!
Consequently, "will to truth" does not mean "I will not allow myself to be deceived" but—there is no alternative—"I will not deceive, not even myself"; and with that we stand on moral ground. For you only have to ask yourself carefully, "Why do you not want to deceive?" especially if it should seem—and it does seem!—as if life aimed at semblance, meaning error, deception, simulation, delusion, self-delusion, and when the great sweep of life has actually always shown itself to be on the side of the most unscrupulous polytropoi [refers to Homer's characterization of Odysseus: much travelled, versatile, wily, and manifold]. Charitably interpreted, such a resolve might perhaps be a quixotism [referring to Don Quixote] a minor slightly mad enthusiasm; but it might also be something more serious, namely, a principle that is hostile to life and destructive.—"Will to truth"—that might be a concealed will to death.
Thus the question "Why science?" leads back to the moral problem: Why have morality at all when life, nature, and history are "not moral"? No doubt, those who are truthful in that audacious and ultimate sense that is presupposed by the faith in science thus affirm another world than the world of life, nature, and history; and insofar as they affirm this "other world"—look, must they not by the same token negate its counterpart, this world, our world?—But you will have gathered what I am driving at, namely, that it is still a metaphysical faith upon which our faith in science rests—that even we seekers after knowledge today, we godless anti-metaphysicians still take our fire, too, from the flame lit by a faith that is thousands of years old, that Christian faith which was also the faith of Plato, that God is the truth, that truth is divine.But what if this should become more and more incredible, if nothing should prove to be divine any more unless it were error, blindness, the lie—if God himself should prove to be our most enduring lie?—