Week of August 16, 2000
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Why does every culture consider
some behavior beyond the pale? Taboos often seem to have some
evolutionary purpose. But there's more to the rules that govern
how we eat, sleep, and have sex - or, rather, how we don't. We'll
explore emerging prohibitions in contemporary society as well
as persistent rules that have their roots in times past.
Host Dr.
Fred Goodwin begins the show with a discussion of the history
of taboo. He ponders how these seemingly superstitious rules could
exist in secular culture.
Next, Irvin James talks about some Navajo
taboos regarding the forces of nature. Mr. James, who works in the
department of cultural affairs in the Navajo Nation, tells of prohibitions
on talking and playing during eclipses, when the Navajo believe
the sun and the moon to be mating. During this time, they're not
supposed to eat, drink or look at the eclipse. For more information
about the Navajo Nation, log on to the Navajo website at www.navajo.org.
Then Ben Jacobson,
director of user research at Razorfish,
an on-line consulting company, explores some of our newest taboos.
Jacobson talks about how rules are changing from generation to generation.
What may be acceptable to those steeped in our fast-paced culture
may seem beyond rude to others. As he points out, when you put your
mother on hold, "you hear about it." Jacobson also mentions eating
genetically engineered food and talking on cell phones in inappropriate
places as taboos that are still taking shape.
Dr. Goodwin's next guest is Dr. Daniel
Fessler, a professor of anthropology at UCLA who specializes
in the interaction of culture and biology. Dr. Fessler discusses
how taboos are different from ordinary rules and superstitions.
As Dr. Fessler explains, a taboo is often defined by the sense that
breaking it will bring an unwelcome supernatural consequence. Taboos
can - and often do - also have an evolutionary purpose. The incest
taboo, he explains, serves in both these roles. Dr. Fessler also
describes the century-old debate about taboos begun by Sigmund Freud
and scholar Edmund Westermark about whether taboos are rooted in
biology or cultural symbolism. And he notes that taboos often inspire
both attraction and repulsion. You can write to Professor Daniel
Fessler at the UCLA Department of Anthropology, Los Angeles, California,
90095 or call him at 310-825-2055.
Dr. Paul Rozin then joins
Dr. Goodwin to discuss disgust, which often overlaps with taboo.
Disgust seems to have emerged as a protection from spoiled food.
But, according to Dr. Rozin, it's expanded it many other areas of
life, including sex, blood, death and even morality. Disgust, Dr.
Rozin explains, is a learned phenomenon. So, in each culture, parents
teach their children to find certain things disgusting. The Chinese
are disgusted by cheese (which is actually "rotting milk," as Dr.
Rozin points out ), while Westerners might be revolted by rotting
meat thought of as a delicacy in other cultures. Dr. Rozin also
describes his research, which involves testing subjects' disgust
limits, finding out why they won't drink apple juice from a perfectly
clean bed pan or wear a sweater they think was originally owned
by Adolf Hitler. You can write to Dr. Paul Rozin at the University
of Pennsylvania Department of Psychology, 3815 Walnut Street, Philadelphia,
PA, 19104-6196.
Next, The Infinite Mind's Sharon
Lerner files a report from the Crown Heights mikvah, a bath
house where married women within that Chasidic Jewish community
take monthly cleansing baths. The mikvah is used at the end of period
of spiritual impurity that begins with menstruation. Sex and even
casual contact between husband and wife are forbidden from the beginning
of the period until at least 12 days after, when women visit the
mikvah. As Lerner reports, the women there go through an elaborate
ritual to remove the taint associated with menstruation. "Mikva
lady" Brucha Levertov explains the challenges of her job. Lerner
also speaks with Chana Selegson and Miriam Lowenstein who use the
Crown Heights mikvah. For more information about the mikvah, you
can reach Taharas Hamishpacha at 718-756-5700 or online at www.mikvah.org.

Finally we hear from commentator Katharine
Gates, author of the new book,
Deviant Desires: Incredibly Strange Sex. Gates muses that some
of the most taboo sex involves mundane, household objects. For more
information about Katharine Gates, log on to her website, www.deviantdesires.com.
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