Authors: Julian Ungar-Sargon.
This paper examines the fundamental tension between two paradigms of textual engagement: the incarnational model, where language itself embodies and is saturated with divine presence, and the referential model, where text functions as signifier pointing toward transcendent truths beyond itself. Drawing on Kabbalistic, Hasidic, psychoanalytic, and postmodern frameworks, we explore how these competing understandings shape religious experience and textual interpretation.
In the incarnational paradigm, exemplified by Zoharic hermeneutics, the very substance of language its letters, spaces, and material form contains divine energy, making the reading experience itself a direct encounter with immanent divinity. In the referential paradigm, text serves as a vehicle pointing toward absent transcendent meaning, privileging rational contemplation over experiential engagement. The dialectical hermeneutics that emerges from this analysis brings together the insights of the Zohar, Lacan's Real/Symbolic/Imaginary triad, Žižek's concept of the traumatic Real, Zornberg's theory of textual absence/presence, Degel Machaneh Yehudah, and my work on embodied textuality and sacred listening to develop a nuanced theory of textual encounter with applications extending to therapeutic spaces and clinical phenomenology.
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