Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Friday, November 7, 2014
Pornosophy: Forbidden Fruit
“The Earthly Paradise and the Fall of Adam and Eve" by Jan Brueghel the Elder and Peter Paul Rubens
Why is modesty so dearly preserved in some venues and so
categorically denied in others? A recent Times
piece about the spa at Baden-Baden (“Naked Came the Strangers,” NYT, 10/10/14)
describes how it's absolutely forbidden for anyone to cover themselves at the Friedrichsbad baths. There men and
women face not only rejection and dejection, but ejection if they refuse to
parade around naked (though one would suspect that erections are probably discouraged). However several days later the
Times ran a story about some torrid happenings at another bath (“Prominent Rabbi Arrested on a Charge of Voyeurism,” NYT, 10/14/14). The Times story describes how a respected Orthodox rabbi was
arrested on suspicion of "placing a hidden camera in a changing" room of the "ritual bath," or mikvah
of his congregation. The issue seems to come down to private parts. Just about
everyone has them. And they’re equal opportunity employers to the
extent that they're basically the same depending on the sex. Yet since the time of
Eve loosing mankind’s innocence, they seem to have taken on great symbolic
value. Penises and vaginas are merely flesh surrounded by pubic hair. None of
this qualifies as being anything new under the sun. It’s because society has proscribed men and women
from viewing each other’s private parts, that such sights have been accorded
increased value. It’s supply and demand. Eve’s picking the fruit was like the
Volstead Act. Once prohibited, nudity became more desirable for being rare.
Obviously the rabbi’s crime had to do with violating an individual’s right to
privacy, but in a way he and those who do similar pranks are a little like
bootleggers whose pleasures and profits come from the forbidden. Anyone who’s
ever been to a nude spa like the one described in the Times knows that the novelty is exhausted faster than you can
say Auf Wiedersehen.
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