Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (76 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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1988.
The Body and Society: Men, Women and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity
. Lectures on the History of Religions, vol. 13. New York: Columbia University Press.
Bruns, Gerald
1987. "Midrash and Allegory." In
The Literary Guide to the Bible,
ed. Robert Alter and Frank Kermode, 62546. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
1990. "The Hermeneutics of Midrash." In
The Book and the Text: The Bible and Literary Theory,
ed. Regina Schwartz, 189213. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Bruns, J. Edgar
1973. Philo Christianus: The Debris of a Legend.
Harvard Theological Review
66:14145.
Buber, Solomon, ed.
1964.
Midrash Tanhuma
. Jerusalem: Ortsel Press.
Buckley, Thomas, and Alma Gottlieb
1988. "A Critical Appraisal of Theories of Menstrual Symbolism." In
Blood Magic: The Anthropology of Menstruation,
ed. Thomas
 
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Page 25
book I will point to tentative handholds on some of those differences. But the texts, particularly the later ones, such as the Talmuds, are encyclopedic anthologies of quotations, comprising all of the places and times of rabbinic culture production. We can assume with confidence neither that a given passage quoted from a particular authority represents an expression of that authority's time and place, nor that it doesn't and that it only belongs to the culture in which the text was put together (contra Neusner 1990). Indeed, even the redaction of the midrashic and talmudic texts cannot be assigned with any certainty to a particular time, place, or set of persons. Even within the individual texts, there is evidence that different sections received their final forms in very different historical moments. For these reasons, even were I capable of doing it, I think that producing a book like Peter Brown's elegant and magisterial
The Body and Society
is quite impossible for the rabbinic culture of the talmudic period (though it could be done for later periods); Brown's work is dependent on analyzing bodies of doctrine produced by given individuals whose biographies, life situations, social and political context, philosophical backgrounds, etc., are to some extent known to us, and we have almost no such information regarding late-antique rabbinic Jewish literature.
35
By default, then, I am generally constrained to write of rabbinic culture as a whole, even knowing that such discussion represents only a gap in our knowledge. Where I believe that I have found converging evidence for difference between the subcultures I have attempted to represent that difference. Examples of such attempts may be found in Chapters 5 and 6, where I argue for different ideologies in Palestine and Babylonia with respect to certain issues of gender and sex.
Dialectic and the Description of Rabbinic Culture
There are important ways in which rabbinic culture structures its main literary expression differently from the cultural-literary patterns we are
35. This was recently brought home to me once more upon reading Ford (1989), who is able to make precise differentiations in Chrysostom's thinking based on different periods of his life and activity as, respectively, anchorite and bishop. Such analysis is impossible for any pre-Islamic rabbinic figures. We often do not know whether they "really" said what they are quoted as saying, and if so, when, in what circumstances, and in what literary context.
 
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