Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (23 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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over, it is at least possible that there is a suggestion here that an unmarried adult male will either masturbate or have nocturnal emissions, both of which were considered as leading to moral impurity in ways that marital intercourse did not. This story should be understood, then, as commentary on the talmudic passage that precedes it. The Babylonian rabbinic community strongly encodes its own self-perception that adult males cannot live without sex, and therefore the young scholar should marry and then study.
14
We are left to account for the view and practice of "them"the Palestiniansalso encoded in our text. Presumably, "they" have a different understanding from "us" of the nature of men and the function of marriage. Rabbi Yohanan's case for delaying marriage is based on the impossibility of full commitment to Torah-study while exercising the responsibilities of marriage. Moreover, he seemingly does not share the Babylonians' concern that an unmarried man could not possibly study Torah ''in purity." If the Babylonians understood marriage as the means to fulfillment of a universal need and as a defense against pollution, and
(footnote continued from the previous page)
after the flood, the priests and priestesses are forbidden to bear children, but not to have sex!
14. By "self-perception," I mean that it reflects a judgment by Babylonian Rabbis on themselves, as well as on others. While this does not in itself constitute a positive appreciation of sexuality per se, as opposed to procreation, it does make it impossible for the capacity to withdraw from sex to be understood as a barometer of the spirit, as it is in several Hellenistic traditions:
A man must not treat his wife as he would a mistress, Seneca admonishes, and Saint Jerome cites him approvingly. His nephew Lucan was of the same opinion. He wrote an epic, a sort of realistic historical novel, in which he describes in his own fashion the story of the civil war between Caesar and Pompey. He shows Cato, model of the Stoic, taking leave of his wife (the same wife he lent for a time to a friend) as he prepares to go off to war. Even on the eve of such a lengthy separation, they do not make love, as Lucan is at pains to point out, explaining as he does the doctrinal significance of the fact. Even that semigreat man Pompey, although no Stoic, does not sleep with his wife on the farewell night. Why the abstinence? Because a good man does not live for petty pleasures and is careful about every action. To give in to desire is immoral. There is only one reasonable ground for a couple to sleep together: procreation. It was a question not of asceticism but of rationalism.
(Veyne 1987, 47)
In addition to the fact that a Jewish husband is
required
to sleep with his wife on a farewell night, the fundamental difference here is that according to the rabbinic cultural formation, fulfilling desire (within the bounds of the permitted) is in no way censorable and cannot, therefore, serve as a barometer of virtue.
 
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therefore were opposed to putting it off at all, the Palestinians who supported delayed marriages must have had a different conception of marital teleology. It would seem a priori that the most obvious candidate for such a role is procreation, which can be postponed without being entirely subverted. This hypothesized emphasis on procreation is consistent with general cultural trends in the Greco-Roman world (Brown 1988, 57). David Daube has shown how the twin notions of the duty of procreation and the denial of any value to sex other than procreation are offspring of the marriage of platonism and Stoicism in Hellenistic culture (1977, 29. See also David Biale 1989, 7). The Palestinians, then, provide a model of a partial resolution of the antinomy between full commitment to marriage and to Torah by organizing them into different stages in the life of the Torah-student. Since it is impossible to fulfill both at the same time and possible to fulfill them serially, that is precisely what is proposed.
15
In Babylonia, this solution was excluded by the assumption that a man without a sexual outlet will inevitably sin, or at least be constantly occupied with "thoughts of sin." If the Palestinians hold that Torah-study can best be fulfilled by remaining unmarried for a time, the Babylonians counter that the state of celibacy renders it nearly impossible to do so "in purity." The text proposes then a sort of utopian solution, which allows for both marriage and total commitment to Torah-study, namely, marrying early and then leaving home for extended periods of time to study Torah. In short, the solution of the Babylonian culture was to create a class of married monks, men who had the pleasure and benefit of marriage for parts of their lives but who would absent themselves from home for extended periods for study. However, problems arise for this "solution" from another halakhic requirement.
The Marital Debt Rabbinic Style (Ketubbot 61b ff.)
In addition to the aspect of sexuality as an obligation that the man owes his own body, as it were, the married man was considered by talmudic law
15. Rashi and Tosafot, the classic medieval commentators on this talmudic passage, interpret the difference between the Babylonians and Palestinians as having to do with putative differences in the distance from the scholars' homes to their
yeshivoth,
places of study. Aside from the fact that these two come to precisely opposite theories of both the material base and its reflection in the superstructure here, the geographic difference does not seem to be thematized as the issue in the Talmud itself, while the ideological difference does seem to me present in the text.
 
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