Maria de Fatima Rosa

Reception of Mesopotamia on Film


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1.1 James Tissot, The Flight of the Prisoners (c. 1896–1902).Public domain.

      But for centuries with no cuneiform sources to attest to its history, Babylon soon became a discourse about otherness. The “gate of the god,” as its Sumerian name “ká.dingir.ra” designed, transformed itself into Babel (a hebrew equivalent of the Sumerian name) and thus endured to this day.

      1.1.2 In the Beginning, Nimrod

      Playing with the words babel and balal (that is, “confusion”), the biblical writer fixed the inescapable destiny of Babylon and its history of condemnation, defining it as a place of disorder, where consensus and common sense would henceforth constitute mere chimeras. The evocation of Babel and its tower, recurrent in medieval and modern arts, intended to stress the impossibility of realizing human supremacy before the divine, and to highlight the capitulation of autocratic power.

      In a futuristic civilization such as Fritz Lang’s Metropolis, for instance, the tower represented an emblem of the unsustainability of society in the manner in which it was operating – basing the authority and power of some on the labor force of others. The Babel capitals that appear in an intertitle of the film, oozing what appears to be the blood of the tower’s builders, alluded, therefore, to the disapproval of political power, in a city whose utopian cloth would gradually be unveiled in the light of slavery. More than synonymous with confusion, Babel was synonymous with human inability to find viable solutions for its experience as a community and as a society in dialogue with the transcendent.

      1.1.3 Daniel and the Ruin of the Neo-Babylonian Empire