Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (55 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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order to prove the great loss to Torah of the years that he was away from the House of Study, but the halakhic feat that he happens to perform is precisely one concerned with sexuality and reproduction. The choice of this particular halakhic matter as the example of Rabbi El'azar's great ability is a strong symptom, then, of what our text is "about":
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One day he went to the study-house. They brought before him sixty kinds of blood, and he declared all of them pure. The Rabbis murmured about him, saying, Is it possible that there is not even one doubtful case among those? He said, "If I am right, let all of the children be boys, and if not, let there be one girl among them." All of them were boys. They were all named after Rabbi El'azar. Our Rabbi said, "How much procreation did that wicked woman prevent from Israel!"
The guilt for the prevention of this procreation is displaced from the rabbis themselves who, by their undue stringency in applying their laws, prevented wives from having intercourse with their husbands and projected onto the wife of Rabbi El'azar, whose only guilt was in protecting her husband from maltreatment by those selfsame Rabbis. Moreover, the "credit," as it were, for the procreation that took place is claimed by the Rabbis for themselves in the naming of the children after the rabbi.
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This reading suggests a source for the tremendous tension manifested in our text around the male reproductive body: anxiety about the role of the rabbinic community in the reproduction and genealogy of Israel, and first and foremost about their own genealogies, their own continuation through replication in their offspring.
Another particularly strong and disturbing connection between the grotesque body of Rabbi El'azar and the female reproductive body is evident in the description of his illness: "In the evening, they used to fold under him sixty felt mats, and in the morning they would find under him
9. I.e., what its cultural business is. Note that in the parallel text of the Palestinian tradition, the story is nearly the same, but all the themes having to do with sex and procreation are absent. For a comparison of the two texts, see Boyarin 1991. Even a theme such as the loss of strength from studying Torah, which does occur in the Palestinian text, has none of the sexual and gender-related overtones that it has in the Babylonian one. See Mandelbaum (1962, 194 ff.). That text is accordingly "about" something else.
10. Of course, I am referring here to the narrator or author of our story and not to the Rabbis in the diegesis. Compare also
The Fathers According to Rabbi Nathan
, Version A, para. 12: "Moreover, how many thousands there were in Israel named Aaron! For had it not been for Aaron these children would not have come into the world [because he reconciled their quarreling parents]" (Goldin 1955, 64).
 
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sixty
vessels full of blood and pus." The text signals by a formal device the gender-related issue at stake here. There sixty vessels of the blood of dying cannot be separated from the exactly sixty issues of feminine blood that were brought before the rabbi in the segment discussed above. Our text of the grotesque body, then, not surprisingly turns on explicit thematic issues having to do with sexuality, gender, and reproduction. The Bakhtinian concept of the grotesque body and its complex and ambivalent connection with death and birth thus provides a conceptual model for reading as a complex textual system passages that are often taken as a series of individual textual moments.
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Vinegar, Son of Wine: The Problem of Reproducibility
The epithet awarded to Rabbi El'azar ben Shim'on, "Vinegar, the son of Wine," can now be read not as a political evaluation but as an expression of the problematic of reproducibility which is the concern of the text.
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Rabbi Shim'on, the father of our hero, was one of the holiest and most ascetic of all the Rabbis, a man who was famous for his entire devotion to the study of Torah alone, as well as for his implacable opposition to the Romans. His son, as signified by both his obesity and his willingness to serve as errand boy to the Romans, is not "Wine," as would be hoped for, but "Vinegar,'' a decidedly inferior product. Exactly the same applies to Rabbi Ishma'el the son of Rabbi Yose, again an ignoble son of a noble father. With great (dramatic) irony, it is these two men who are challenged by the Roman matron insisting, "Your children are not yours." Their obesity prevents them, she suggests, from being able to have intercourse with their wives. They answer her, however, in convincing manner that indeed they are the fathers of their children, so as to prevent
11. This should not be mistaken for either a New Critical or a structuralist claim for totalizable meaning in the narrative, but rather for a claim that the text deals with one large thematic moment. Other thematic moments may also be present in the same text.
12. Once more, the theme already occurs in the Palestinian "source-text." My claim is not, therefore, of an absolute conflict between Palestinian and Babylonian ideologies, but of the further development of internal conflict in the relatively Hellenism-free Babylonian branch of the culture. It is interesting to note that one of the justifications for celibacy in Shaker philosophy was that children often enough turn out badly (Kitch 1989, 52).
 
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