93
The Fractious Eye
Numen 61 (2014) 83–108
In at least three respects, the passage seems to be related to the selection
from
Dēnkard
5 studied above. Both sources highlight the special role that
demons — identified here as the corpse demoness (
nasuš
) —
play in men-
strual impurity. At the same time, both sources seem to evince a certain natu-
ralistic bent that attempts an understanding of the movement of impurity by
using certain rules and analogies from “physics.” What is again fascinating is
the way in which the texts meld demonology with naturalistic
and causal spec-
ulation. In this effort, both texts point to the role of the “breath/puff,” although
in
Dēnkard
3 it is used as a metaphor for the mechanics of visual contagion
while in
Dēnkard
5 it actually explains the source of the impurity’s strength. Of
course, the passage of
Dēnkard
3 is a more limited inquiry
into the power of the
menstruant’s gaze, so it does not contain a lengthy exposition on the peculiar-
ity and toxicity of menstruation comparable to the reflections of
Dēnkard
5.
As much as the belief in a polluting gaze is emphasized in
Dēnkard
3, it
is important to note that a kernel of this idea already appears in the
Avesta
.
Specifically, the
Videvdad
requires that menstruants sequester themselves at
some distance from the home so that they do not look at the fire: “They should
go about their work
farther away from the house
,
either a half or a third or a
fourth or a fifth; if not, the woman may see the fire, if not, the woman may look
back at the light of the fire” (
Videvdad
16.2).32
Although the original
Avestan text of the
Videvdad
does not elaborate on
the matter, the Pahlavi
Videvdad
— the traditional Middle Persian rendition
of the Avestan
Videvdad
that took shape during Sasanian times33 —
explains
that were the menstruant to gaze at the fire, she would have committed a sin.
At 16.4 the Pahlavi
Videvdad
adds other items that are rendered impure by the
menstruant’s gaze. It seems possible that the laws governing the menstruant’s
gaze described in
Videvdad
16.2
lead the
Dēnkard
to speculate about the nature
of this power, which again is unique to menstrual impurity and does not apply
to corpse impurity.
Since the
Dēnkard
’s argument here turns on the difference between men-
strual and corpse impurity, the metaphysics used to explain the menstruant’s
gaze must somehow make this distinction clear.
Because the author assumes
that we are dealing with a
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: