Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (64 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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him, "He is his son." He applied to him the verse, "The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life; and he that wins souls is wise" [Proverbs 11:30]. ''The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life": this is Rabbi Yose the son of Rabbi El'azar the son of Rabbi Shim'on, and "he that wins souls is wise'': this is Rabbi Shim'on, the son of Issi, the son of Lakonia.
When he died, they brought him to the burial cave of his father. A snake surrounded the cave of his father. They said, "Snake, open the door and the son will enter to be with his father." It did not open for them. The people thought that it was because [the father] was greater than the son. A voice came from heaven saying that it was because [the father] suffered in a cave,
45
and the son did not suffer in a cave.
Rabbi happened to come to the town of Rabbi Tarfon. He asked, "Does that righteous man have a son?" [for Rabbi Tarfon] had lost his children. They said to him, "He has no son, but he has the son of a daughter, and any prostitute who is hired for four, hires him for eight." He said to him, "If you return [to Torah], I will give you my daughter." He returned.
There are those who say that he married her and divorced her, and those who say that he did not marry her at all, in order that people would not say that he returned for that
. And Rabbi, why did he go to such lengths? For Rabbi Yehuda said that Rav said
and there are those who say it in the name of Rabbi Hiyya the son of Abba in the name of Rabbi Yohanan and those who say it in the name of Rabbi Shmuel the son of Nahmani in the name of Rabbi Yonathan,
"Anyone who teaches the son of his friend Torah, will be privileged to sit in the Yeshiva on High . . ." Said Rabbi Parnak in the name of Rabbi Yohanan, "Anyone who is a disciple of the wise and his son is a disciple of the wise and his grandson is a disciple of the wise, the Torah will not cease from his progeny forever."
45. When hiding from the Romans for thirteen years for the crime of studying Torah.
 
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Concluding Forward
Talmudic Study as Cultural Critique
In short, genealogy as resistance involves using history to give voice to the marginal and submerged voices which lie "a little beneath history"the voices of the mad, the delinquent, the abnormal, the disempowered. It locates many discontinuous and regional struggles against power both in the past and present. These voices are the sources of resistance, the creative subjects of history.
(Sawicki 1991, 28)
In my introduction I outlined several cultural goals for this book. The three to which I would like to return in this conclusion are (1) the notion of cultural dialectics, (2) generous critique, and (3) the desire to changein some small waythe world. I would like to suggest (or perhaps hope against hope) that if the book achieves anything of its third ambition, it will be owing to the success of the first two as modalities of cultural criticism.
My assumption is that we cannot change the actual past. We can only change the present and the future, in part by changing our understanding of the past. Unless the past is experienced merely as a burden to be thrown off (which indeed it might be by many), then constructing a monolithically negative perception of the past and cultivating anger at it seem to be counterproductive and disempowering for change. Finding only misogyny in the past reproduces misogyny; finding only a lack of female power, autonomy, and creativity reifies female passivity and victimhood. In contrast to this, recovery of those forces in the past that opposed the dominant androcentrism can help put us on a trajectory of empowerment for transformation. Jana Sawicki has made a similar point in a different context, arguing that some feminist scholars portray the power of reproductive technologies over women's bodies as such that "our only options appear to be either total rejection of them or collaboration in our own domination" (Sawicki 1991, 14). Instead of this, Sawicki
 
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suggests a strategy of paying "constant attention to the ruptures, discontinuities and cracks in the systems of power," such that, "multiple strategies for resisting their dangerous implications" can be developed without either collaborating in domination or totally rejecting the past. Since I do not wish to collaborate in domination and certainly do not wish to reject Judaism, the latter type of research can be a powerfully redemptive tool. Precisely and paradoxically: where the culture did not work then, that is where we can make it work for us now. That is the strategy of the current project.
There are two lines of inquiry to be pursued. The first delves for evidence of women's power, autonomy, and creativity that the dominant discourse wishes to suppress but cannot entirely expunge. This line of research has been very fruitful for study of ancient Greece, the biblical period, and the Hellenistic period.
1
The second line of inquiry, however, promises to be more fruitful for the Talmud, namely the search for male opposition,
within the Talmud itself,
however rudimentary, to the dominant, androcentric discourse.
Perhaps the critic who has had the greatest effect on forming the explicitly feminist aspects of my critical practice is Mieke Bal, most obviously, though not exclusively, owing to her work on the Hebrew Bible (Bal 1987, 1988a, and 1988b). The theoretical factor in her work that has made it most productive for me is the explicit way it engages the assumed monolithic character of patriarchy and shows that the very assumption of that monolith serves the interests of those who wish to retain gender hierarchy today, and even more important that it is an artifact of particular masculist
2
readings of biblical texts. In a recent essay, Bal has articulated the intended cultural function of her work concisely and persuasively:
1. This has been realized generally by many feminist critics and historians who have begun searching in the Bible and in other ancient literature and cultural remains for whatever evidence might be found or reread for women's creativity and cultural power. Some feminist scholars have been pursuing this line of research with regard to late-antique Judaism, notably Bernadette Brooten, Ross Kraemer, and Amy-Jill Levine. This kind of work can be and has to be pursued for the Talmud as well, although, to be sure, with regard to the talmudic literature and period the evidence will be sparse indeed.
2. This term is in some ways problematic and in other ways very useful. It is problematic in that it parallels
feminist,
but feminism is not a project of female domination over males, while masculism has historically been a project of male domination over females. On the other hand, it is a useful term in that it clearly marks out the "universal" and the realm of "common knowledge" as inscribed by male interests.
 
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