{"id":2631,"date":"2023-03-13T14:58:51","date_gmt":"2023-03-13T22:58:51","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/?p=2631"},"modified":"2023-03-13T14:58:51","modified_gmt":"2023-03-13T22:58:51","slug":"embedded-dislike","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/2023\/03\/13\/embedded-dislike\/","title":{"rendered":"Embedded Dislike"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>I wrote this not-actually-academic piece for my Patreons about a year ago. This is how I play with a concept. It&#8217;s what I do in the very early stages of research, when I&#8217;m trying to understand what approaches are sensible and which are stupid. I&#8217;m giving it to you now, partly because the themes of Hogwarts&#8217; Legacy apply to it and partly because, while I talk about things Jewish in this example, we need to understand embedded prejudice for so many things. I face embedded prejudice every day because of my physical restrictions and because I&#8217;m female and Jewish; transpeople are dealing with far too much facing of it right now (and without nearly enough support); and most minority cultures in face it every day (sometimes in horrific ways) while being dealt with by mainstream culture. Australian politics has just demonstrated how poverty brings forward such embedded attitudes, and in the UK &#8216;class&#8217; shouts as an issue. No country has the same set of biases, but all of us have groups whose everyday is flavoured by how others simply accept stories and what lies embedded in them.<\/p>\n<p>While I&#8217;m researching cultural embedding, I&#8217;m not on top of this part of the subject yet. That deep acceptance of stereotyping and hate that appears in literature is very difficult.<\/p>\n<p>I really need to focus on more ways of discussing embedded prejudice in my research. I began experiencing how literature delivers wallops related to prejudice when <em>Oliver!<\/em> (and its source <em>Oliver Twist<\/em>) caused me many problems as a child, then, when a whole year level studied <em>The Merchant of Venice<\/em>, I had to deal with it again. The deeper bias in these works are led to by a shallow bias and some really stupid interpretations. Every time Fagin is given a European Jewish accent, for instance, I see the application of the Universal Jew prejudice. Fagin was based upon a real person, Ikey Solomon, who was probably Sephardi and who almost definitely had a London accent. Solomon was well-known for dressing nattily (and for being a high-level, well-connected fence for stolen goods), not for leading children astray. He ended up in Australia (before it was Australia, when it was a bunch of British colonies) and his personal story is so much more fascinating than\u00a0 Dickens&#8217; novel. There&#8217;s a modern novel about him, too, but I don&#8217;t recommend it because it gets the Jewish side very wrong, too and poses a very different set of problems.<\/p>\n<p>I can&#8217;t follow this research up right now &#8211; I am in the middle of a project that examines other facets of culture in fiction. This other project is helping me understand how to look at these things fairly. I need that fairness. Not everyone who depicts people using these biases does it intentionally. However, every single one of them hurts people. Since I&#8217;m terrified of the impact <em>Hogwarts&#8217; Legacy<\/em> will have in this respect, I need to share some of my thoughts. These thoughts are neither serious nor complete, but they play with some very important concepts that I will return to, when I can. I&#8217;m writing a novel that addresses some of them and I will do old-fashioned research for the rest.<\/p>\n<p>If you want to read something a bit more considered than a daft essay, you will find better discussions (but not of\u00a0 vampires) in my book <a href=\"https:\/\/booko.info\/9781913387914\/Story-Matrices-Cultural-Encoding-and-Cultural-Baggage-in-Science-Fiction-and-Fantasy\">Story Matrices<\/a>. I wanted to develop methods that would help writers and editors understand what they&#8217;re doing so that they can make active choices in these matters. <em>Story Matrices<\/em> is that book.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\"><b>My entirely daft theory about Bram Stoker and his Jewish vampires. <\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">There is one thing you need to know about Bram Stoker, before I can begin talking about his relationship to vampires and my new (totally untenable) daft theory: he didn\u2019t like Jews. If he were brought forward to this century and put on a convention panel with me, he\u2019d be very uncomfortable, even though I don\u2019t match the Jewish stereotypes he carried. I\u2019ve had Thoughts for a while about this, but the Problem of Garlic brought everything together. That\u2019s as good a reason as any to begin with the problem of garlic. Except I can\u2019t. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">I\u2019ve been trying to handle this for years. <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">Behind his writing there is something significantly more than<\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\"> the <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">various<\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\"> put-downs you see in other authors of his time and place: he genuinely didn\u2019t like Jews. My current random theory is that this didn\u2019t mean he knew nothing about Jewish culture. <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">He probably didn\u2019t know that he used Jewish culture and also the stuff used to describe Jews by bigots, but his own bias meant that his incorporation of these things together in his work was seamless and convincing and created our classic vampire story. Our classic vampire story, in order words, quietly reinforces antisemitism. Just like Dracula, it looks charming, but it hurts people.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">My theory goes (in its wayward way) that he took some Jewish folk culture from Eastern Europe and applied it to vampires. Also, there were quite a few Jews in Transylvania in the nineteenth century. They spoke Hungarian, were classified ethnically as Hungarian, and were citizens. This is the by-product of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. None of them (as far as I can work out) were in any way related to any branch of my family. Jews in Ireland were not granted citizenship until 1846, while most other people were given citizenship in 1783. None of the eighteenth and nineteenth century Irish Jews were in any way related to any branch of my family, either. (This is another aspect of various Jewish cultures \u2013 the need to work out relationships to other people.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">And now we\u2019re finally up to that garlic.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">There is one very folkish and not at all religious part of Jewish culture that contains garlic as a repellent. Just one. But it\u2019s a big one. In fact, it\u2019s how some Jews handle Christmas.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">It\u2019s not been easy to be Jewish over the centuries and much folk culture has sprung up to help people <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">deal with <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">it <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">and the violence towards Jews that can go alongside it<\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">. A lot of <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">the folk culture<\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\"> was lost with the various mass murders that tend to be handed out to Jewish populations, but recently, I have been exploring one <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">set of folk practices <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">in particular. <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">This aspect began about 1800 years ago, and it\u2019s the Jewish stories <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">(note the plural) of the life of Jesus. My favourite is, of course, from the Middle Ages and one of several <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">lives of Jesus <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">from that time. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">Lives of famous people is such a Medieval thing: it includes the lives of saints, and the spectacular deeds of kings and princes and noble knights. The stories about Jesus <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">don\u2019t fit into those types of stories at all: in this set of Jewish folk cultural traditions Jesus was no saint, king, prince or noble knight. The stories of Jesus <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">all fit into the category of lives about famous magicians, <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">alongside people like Merlin<\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">All of the versions of the story of Jesus are<\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\"> entirely unacceptable and not-nice from a Christian perspective. My favourite includes flying and the pulling out of hair. Being a polite religion and this being considered fictional and part of folk culture, it was mostly kept hidden from Christians, out of respect. <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">Also, of course, because it isn\u2019t always safe to be Jewish and one doesn\u2019t want to provoke more persecution.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">That variant of the life was told on Christmas Eve, for hundreds and hundreds of years. We don&#8217;t know which Jewish cultures told it, nor how they did, nor how many knew it, but Christians being upset about the story have written about it over the centuries and scholars have checked what they&#8217;ve written against what they knew about Jewish cultural practices and\u2026 it really happened. It might still really happen. If it does, it\u2019s not part of my family\u2019s tradition at all.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">The stories about Jesus seem to be a way of dealing with antisemitism and its accompanying violence. In far too many times and places it was unsafe to leave the house at Christmas, you see. Stones were thrown at Easter, so Christmas wasn\u2019t the only time and place that it was safer to shut the doors and make home tight and safe and not leave it until the bigotry passed a bit.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">This is all related to garlic. I\u2019m getting to that.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">When one shuts one\u2019s doors and shutters windows and pretends one isn\u2019t home because otherwise it was dangerous, one develops folkways to keep the evils out. Some European Jews had a tradition, over hundreds of years, of eating garlic on Christmas Eve to keep Jesus away. His rising from the dead, you see, was not interpreted the same way by Jews as by Christians. Garlic, in Eastern Europe from at least the 19<sup>th<\/sup> century, kept evil beings away\u2026 and while it\u2019s deeply troubling that Jesus was seen as evil by some Jews (historically) when you consider what was done to Jews in his name, it\u2019s very easy to see how this occurred. An undead magician who brought evil with him was kept away by garlic on Christmas Eve. And maybe also salt. I forgot the salt.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">Salt has some big baggage. Salt was used in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth when someone was investigating a case. It was blessed according to Christian rite and put in the mouth of Jewish witnesses to force them to tell the truth. And now I can&#8217;t remember if salt was used in Stoker* or in other vampire stories. One day I will check, I promise.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">Stoker used folk material from Wallachia and Moldavia for his vampire background. It\u2019s really as simple as that. There was a significant Jewish population (some cultural overlap here with me, because Romania did, at times, include what is now known as Moldova and my mother\u2019s maternal grandparents were from there) and Stoker simply included the whole. <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">His main source<\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\"> was <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\"><i>An Account of the Principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia<\/i><\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">, <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">and was written by the British diplomat in that region, William Wilkinson. Stoker used other sources, but this one is freely available on the web and I can give you a link to it, so it\u2019s the one I\u2019m citing. https:\/\/books.google.com.au\/books?id=RogMAQAAMAAJ&amp;printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">R<\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">eally, this is not about Stoker being antisemitic (though he was, and Wilkinson himself describes Jews as of \u201cobscure race\u201d and <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">an <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">\u201cinglorious nation\u201d so he would not have liked me, either) it\u2019s about how cultural practices develop and what happens when an Irish writer doesn\u2019t stop to think about whose culture he\u2019s borrowing and how. <\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">It\u2019s about the damage done by inconsidered cultural appropriation.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">The vampiric traditions in the various cultures of Europe have little to do with most English vampire stories. My favourite European vampire tradition is that you can handle vampires by strewing seeds and grain on the ground, because they will be forced to collect them and count them and that gives the victim time to escape. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">The burial of possible vampires, though, is just as interesting. It has been verified by archaeologists, which is where I found out about bricks. Potential vampires might be buried upside down, or decapitated, or buried with sharp objects to prevent them from doing harm. Some people were buried with bricks in their mouths, to prevent them rising (in Scotland and in Italy as well as in Romania). This is all evidence that European belief in a vampire rising and causing damage is something many cultures share. The vampire as sexy and pale, however, that&#8217;s the stuff of novels. (Also, there was a vampire craze in the eighteenth century, and I need to explore this one day. We call all kinds of things vampiric these days, when they were far more clearly demonic possession, and I need to find out where the eighteenth century assigned it.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">The thing is, there was a \u201cJews are dangerous because they are sexy and pale and lead good Christians astray\u201d cultural construct in the nineteenth century. Also, not everyone considered us full human beings. The impurity of blood notion the Inquisition spread had consequences. And blood drinking is a libel that has been used to attack Jews from the Middle Ages. Invented, and has not a thing to do with either the Jewish religion or any Jewish folkways and debunked so very many times\u2026 but Jews are still being accused of it and murdered with it as an excuse and\u2026 near-humans who are pale and sexy and find the cross really uncomfortable and drink blood and won\u2019t disappear when you want them gone so you have to resort to violence and awful means? Sounds like vampires to me. The garlic is an extra, a bit of appropriation to make the thing real.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">Stoker\u2019s vampire<\/span><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\"> doesn\u2019t fit the folk tradition, but it\u2019s a good literary metaphor for Jews by antisemites. I don\u2019t think it\u2019s that any more, for most people, but the moment I saw the nature of the folkways and bigotry inherent in the first century of vampire tales told to the general public in English (and French, to be honest, and possibly German) I started realising that many of these stories underpin antisemitism and violence. <\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\">This is why, when I use vampires, I use them a bit differently. But that\u2019s a different story.<\/span><\/p>\n<p lang=\"en-US\"><span style=\"font-family: Gentium Book Basic;\"><span style=\"font-size: medium;\">*You need an endnote. Most of what Stoker wrote was borrowed, however, he invented vampires not being visible in mirrors for <i>Dracula<\/i>. In Judaism, mirrors can be portals for the soul at certain times. I doubt Stoker knew this and I can\u2019t see any evidence of him knowing it, unless he\u2019s describing evidence of vampires not having souls.<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>I wrote this not-actually-academic piece for my Patreons about a year ago. This is how I play with a concept. It&#8217;s what I do in the very early stages of research, when I&#8217;m trying to understand what approaches are sensible and which are stupid. I&#8217;m giving it to you now, partly because the themes of [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[16,20,17],"tags":[678,677,679,219,198],"class_list":["post-2631","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-essays","category-process","category-rants","tag-antisemtiism","tag-bram-stoker","tag-cultural-transmission","tag-folk-culture","tag-popular-culture"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2631","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/8"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2631"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2631\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2632,"href":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2631\/revisions\/2632"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2631"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2631"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/treehousewriters.com\/wp53\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2631"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}