Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (60 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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Land and lost. He meant, on my reading: "I am of the spiritual seed of Joseph; just as he was beautiful of form and spirit and sat by the ritual bath and produced spiritual progeny, so also I." The beauty of Joseph and his ardent sexual purity were, of course, both topoi of the culture and would have been easily recognized in Rabbi Yohanan's claim. Rabbi Yohanan thus embodies the ideology of the classic.
29
The story of Rabbi Yohanan and Resh Lakish continues the theme of gender, sex, and reproduction. The former is extraordinarily beautiful, nearly androgynous, beardless and so sexually attractive to the masculine Resh Lakish that the latter is willing to perform prodigious athletic feats to get to him. Moreover, compared to the other Rabbis, he had the smallest penis as well, in the Hellenistic world a signifier of male beauty.
30
Lest we miss the message, the narrator segues immediately into the story of Resh Lakish's misidentification of Rabbi Yohanan as a woman:
One day, Rabbi Yohanan was bathing in the Jordan. Resh Lakish saw him and thought he was a woman. He crossed the Jordan after him by placing his lance in the Jordan and vaulting to the other side. When Rabbi Yohanan saw Rabbi Shim'on the son of Lakish [= Resh Lakish], he said to him, "Your strength for Torah!" He replied, "Your beauty for women!" He said to him, "If you repent, I will give you my sister who is more beautiful than I am."
As in the Greek
Paideia,
still enormously influential in late antiquity (Jaeger 1961), Rabbi Yohanan does manage to produce Resh Lakish as a spiritual copy of him, just as he wished to produce infants who would be physical copies of him. Just as he is effeminate or androgynous, he feminizes Resh Lakish also, and by doing so, reproduces him as a "great man":
29. Lest there be any misunderstanding, let me make it explicit that "Rabbi Yohanan" here means the character Rabbi Yohanan in this particular text. Thus, no claim is being made that the historical Rabbi Yohanan was more or less influenced by Greek culture than any other Rabbi but only that here he, as the representative
par excellence
of Palestinian rabbinism for the Babylonians, is a signifier of a certain cultural moment and cultural struggle. In other Babylonian stories about him, he is represented as grotesque in his person as well.
30. "The Greek aesthetic prefers discreet genitals, small in size" (Lissarrague 1990, 56 and texts cited there). For classical male beauty as being androgynous, see Paglia (1990, 99 ff.). In particular, for the small penis as a standard of male beauty, see Paglia (ibid., 11415). In truth, I am not certain that, given the size of a
kav,
Rabbi Yohanan's penis is actually represented as small, but there can be no doubt that the contrast of nine and seven versus three suggests just that. In any case, we should not misunderstand that the Rabbis considered themselves eunuched. Rabbi Yohanan does, after all, have a penis, one of at least normal size.
 
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He agreed. He wanted to cross back [vault back on his lance!] to take his clothes but he couldn't. He taught him Mishna and Talmud and made him into a great man.
The feminizing virtue of Torah is strongly represented in this story. As soon as Resh Lakish even agrees to study Torah, he can no longer vault back over the river on his spear! "His strength has been sapped as that of a woman."
31
What we have here is, in fact, an almost exact reversal of the pattern of Greek pederasty, in which an older man, marked as such by his beard,
32
takes an adolescent under his wing and in an erotic relationship educates him and prepares him for full participation in civic life. At the end, the young man is a
hoplite,
a spear-bearer. Here, however, it is the beardless, androgynous one who takes the virile
hoplite
under
his
wing, educates him and makes him a "great man," sapping, however, his physical prowess and disempowering his "spear" in the process. To be sure, within the Jewish moral economy, the homoerotic implications
must
be displaced from a relationship between Resh Lakish and Rabbi Yohanan to his sister, a displacement that the text makes explicit. Rabbi Yohanan's almost androgynous quality is once more underlined in the text further on when in the discussion of why he is not mentioned in a list of beautiful Rabbis, it is remarked that the others had splendor of face, but "Rabbi Yohanan did not have splendor of face'':
Is that true?! But haven't we been taught by our master that, "The beauty of Rabbi Kahana is like the beauty of Rabbi Abbahu. The beauty of Rabbi Abbahu is like the beauty of our father Jacob. The beauty of our father Jacob is like the beauty of Adam," and that of Rabbi Yohanan is not mentioned.
Rabbi Yohanan did not have splendor of face
.
The Talmud raises an objection to the citation of Rabbi Yohanan as the very embodiment of beauty because there is a tradition that lists beautiful Rabbis and does not mention him. The answer is that Rabbi Yohanan, although beautiful, was left out of this list, because he did not possess "splendor of face." This phrase refers to the biblical verse in which we
31. The Talmud in Sanhedrin 26b explicitly refers to the Torah as "sapping the strength of a man," and "his strength was sapped as that of a woman" is a common phrase in the talmudic literature.
32. Foucault (1986b, 199) remarks on the appearance of the beard as the sign that the relationship between the man and boy must end and that now the young man ought to become the subject and not the object of pedagogy (and pederasty). See also Frontisi-Ducroux and Lissarrague (1990, 217) and Gleason (1990, 405 n. 63).
 
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