Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (166 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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very noble form, which, as we have explained, is the
image of God and His likeness,
should be bound to earthy, turbid, and dark matter, which calls upon man every imperfection and corruption.
(1963, 431)
Maimonides rivals nearly any neo-platonist here in his horror of matter and his revulsion from bodily life. And as we might expect, Maimonides's doctrine regarding sexuality differs sharply from that of the talmudic Rabbis: "With regard to copulation, I need not add anything to what I have said in my Commentary on Aboth about the aversion in which it is held by what occurs in our wise and pure Law, and about the prohibition against mentioning it or against making it in any way or for any reason a subject of conversation" (1963, 434). This characterization of sex and the body in general as being held in "aversion" by the Torah needs only to be confronted by the talmudic story of the disciple who hid under his teacher's bed to observe him making love to his wife, "because it is Torah and I must learn,"
40
to show how far the medieval rabbi has moved from the Rabbis of the Talmud and midrash. Where the Rabbis had showed an easy acceptance of contained, married sex and the body and indeed had conversed about these subjects freely, for Maimonides they become subjects of shame and repression.
41
Maimonides accepts and transmits the midrashic interpretation of the narrative describing the creation of woman at the same time as man. However, by introducing a Platonic conception of language and an Aristotelian physical theory, he effectively undermines the cultural import of that very midrash. Yes, Adam and Eve were created as one, but only because matter and form never exist without each other. And as for the second part of the story, the separation narrated in the second chapter of Genesis according to the midrash, Maimonides responds that it simply describes the
conflict
between form and matter. Even if, for Maimonides, matter was in harmony with form before the separation of the woman,
40. Babylonian Talmud, Berakhot 62a. In another section of the present project, I shall undertake a fuller reading of that story and its congeners.
41. It is true that an anthology of rabbinic sayings could be produced in support of Maimonides's disposition. Nevertheless, the statement that copulation is held in aversion by the Law is one that is impossible to support from talmudic sources, and indeed, the more traditional (i.e., non-Aristotelian) opponents of Maimonides roundly attacked him on this point, as well as on others closely related to it, viz. the corporeality of God and corporeal resurrection.
 
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a way of thinking as the conscious and unconscious is for us, but the proto-rabbinite Jews of Palestine seem to have strongly resisted such dualist notions. I will claim that this resistance was at least partly owing to cultural politics, for, as we have seen, one consequence of at least the post-Pauline Christian adoption of dualist notions was to allegorize the reality of Israel quite out of corporeal existence. The notion that the physical is just a sign or shadow of that which is really real allows for a disavowal of sexuality and procreation, of the importance of filiation and genealogy, and of the concrete, historical sense of scripture, of, indeed, historical memory itself. The emphasis, on the other hand, on the body as the very site of human significance allows for no such devaluations.
9
Sexuality is accordingly not just a subheading under ethics but situated at the core of alternate individual and collective self-understandings.
10
A self and a collective that conceive of their actuality as spiritual will behave very differently from a self and a collective that see the body as the privileged site of human essence. Rabbinic Judaism and early Christianities were very different from each other in their ideologies of sexuality and thus of the self and the collective and cannot be subsumed under a rubric of Judaeo-Christianity, a term which, if it means anything at all, only takes on that meaning in modernity.
11
Religious symbols such as the incarnation and the virgin birth are important signs of cultural difference that functioned at levels of social practice and not only theology (Gager 1982).
12
In late antiquity itself, both Jews and Christians realized and remarked (with mutual acrimony) this difference around the body as a key area of cultural contention between them. The counter-charge of
9. Verna Harrison has pointed out to me that this formulation too strongly equates body with sexuality and that there are Christian writers (in particular the Cappadocian Fathers) who positively mark the role of the body while still disavowing sexuality. They simply understand sexuality as a secondary and temporary entity within the body itself. I think the point is well taken and should be kept in mind. Caroline Bynum's work on resurrection in the Western tradition (1991) also points in this direction.
10. I owe this brilliant formulation to John Miles.
11. Below I will argue that in spite of the enormous variations within both Christianities and rabbinic Judaism, the near-universal privileging of virginity, even for Christian thinkers who valorize marriage, produces an irreducible difference between that formation and rabbinic Judaism, for which sexuality and procreation are understood as acts of ultimate religious significance and for which virginity is highly problematic, as Christian writers in antiquity correctly emphasized.
12. In Boyarin (1992, 497) I argue that the incarnation of God constitutes not an affirmation of corporeality but rather a hypostatization of dualism.
 
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