Eros as a Hermeneutics

Here is love’s tension, love’s politics. Here is form. The reader loves without knowing. (Lisa Robertson, “Time in the Codex”)

Johannes Vermeer, Girl Reading Letter at an Open Window (partial restoration), 1657–59

Hermeneutics and erotics do not exclude one another. … For Plato, the only reaction appropriate to beauty is eros—love, the desire to possess. Moreover, all beautiful things draw us beyond themselves, leading us to recognize and love other, more precious beauties, culminating in the love of the beauty of virtue itself.²

2021 restoration (left) and the pre-restored version (right)

and when I call you my love, my love, is it you I am calling or my love? You, my love, is it you I thereby name, is it to you that I address myself? I don’t know if the question is well put, it frightens me. … when I call you my love, is it that I am calling you, yourself, or is it that I am telling my love? and when I tell you my love is it that I am declaring my love to you or indeed that I am telling you, yourself, my love, and that you are my love.⁵

I must, then, name this love my love, since it would not fascinate me as my idol if, first, it did not render to me, like an unseen mirror, the image of myself. Love, loved for itself, inevitably ends as self-love, in the phenomenological figure of self-idolatry.

Dante Gabriel Rossetti, The Beloved (The Bride), 1865–6

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Theology, Hermeneutics, Jewish Mysticism | UChicago Divinity 2025

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Theology, Hermeneutics, Jewish Mysticism | UChicago Divinity 2025