© 2001 by American Academy of Religion
ARTICLES |
The Unnamed and the Defaced: The Limits of Rhetoric in Augustine's Confessiones
Matthew G.Condon Ph D Candidate at the Divinity School, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637; and a Visiting Lecturer at the Department of Religious Studies, Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis Indianapolis, IN 46202
This article addresses a seeming aporia for the modern reader of Augustine's Confessiones: why is it that Augustine refuses to name significant figures in his life throughout his self-narrative? By way of attempting an answer, I begin with the formal problems of the Confessiones, that is, how one should approach such a fractured and rhetorically disciplined text. Then I address the more specific problem that has been curiously neglected by a whole range of commentators: the violent unnaming and defacing that occurs as a result of Augustine's willful forgetting of particular people who were once close to him. I draw the conclusions that such unnaming was not an oversight committed by Augustine, that he does so in order to distance his own conversion experience from less inspiring stories, and that this is part of a conscious, rhetorical agenda to align his own name with certain distinguished members of the Latin Church