Read Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture Online

Authors: Daniel Boyarin

Tags: #Religion, #Judaism, #General

Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (176 page)

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from the direct discourse about sex, gender, and marriage to an indirect contest over language and the interpretation of history, scripture, and ritual practices, but it is, nevertheless, the same contest. I claim not only that I see a nexus between the interpretations of sexuality and the interpretations of ethnicity but that this connection was perceived in late antiquity.
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Thus, when Augustine consigns the Jews to eternal carnality, he draws a direct connection between anthropology and hermeneutics. Because the Jews reject reading "in the spirit," Therefore they are condemned to remain "Israel in the flesh." Allegory is thus, in his theory, a mode of relating to the body. In another part of the Christian world, Origen also described the failure of the Jews as owing to a literalist hermeneutic, one which is unwilling to go beyond or behind the material language and discover its immaterial spirit (Crouzel 1989, 10712). This way of thinking about language had been initially stimulated in the Fathers by Paul's usage of "in the flesh" and "in the spirit'' to mean, respectively, literal and figurative. romans 7:56 is a powerful example of this hermeneutic structure: ''For when we were still in the flesh, our sinful passions, stirred up by the law, were at work on our members to bear fruit for death. But now we are fully freed from the law, dead to that in which we lay captive. We can thus serve in the new being of the Spirit and not the old one of the letter." In fact, exactly the same metaphor is used independently of Paul by Philo, albeit to make exactly the opposite point:
It is true that receiving circumcision does indeed portray the excision of pleasure and all passions, and the putting away of the impious conceit, under which the mind supposed that it was capable of begetting by its own power: but let us not on this account repeal the law laid down for circumcising. Why, we shall be ignoring the sanctity of the Temple and a thousand other things, if we are going to pay heed to nothing except what is shewn us by the inner meaning of things. Nay, we should look on all these outward observances as resembling the body,
14. Note that we find exactly the same nexus in the conflict of the Shakers, Koreshantists, and Sanctificationists with "mainstream" Christianity in nineteenth-century America. For these groups as well, as Kitch (1989, 67) points out, celibacy was conjoined with "the Bible as a symbolic rather than a literal history. They objected to baptism by water and to the use of bread and wine in the sacrament on the same grounds; they regarded such things as symbolic, not literal or substantive." All of these groups also believed in an androgynous God, whose image was restored in celibate, spiritual communion between men and women. The parallel is, thus, exact.
 
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find room for. But when woman too had been made, beholding a figure like his own and a kindred form, he was gladdened by the sight, and approached and greeted her. She, seeing no living thing more like herself than he, is filled with glee and shamefastly returns his greeting. Love supervenes, brings together and fits into one the divided halves, as it were, of a single living creature, and sets up in each of them a desire for fellowship with the other with a view to the production of their like.
And this desire begat likewise bodily pleasure, that pleasure which is the beginning of wrongs and violation of the law, the pleasure for the sake of which men bring on themselves the life of mortality and wretchedness in lieu of that of immortality and bliss
.
(Philo 1929b, 121; emphasis added)
Two themes are combined in this passage of Philo, the two ingredients I identify as endemic to the discourse of misogyny. The first is woman as misfortune, not merely after the factcontingently, as it werebut necessarilyessentially misfortune. The second is the ontologically secondary status of the gendered human, and "woman" as the name for that entity which produces gender. Both of these motives are absent from the Bible, and indeed from subsequent rabbinic literature, but have antecedents in canonical Greek texts and notably in Hesiod.
The Rabbis' Eve
The rabbinic portrayals of woman's origin and role are quite different from that of Philo and also quite varied internally. For much of the midrashic tradition, Genesis 1:27 is interpreted as a literal statement of the first human's creation as male and female. The first human is portrayed as physically androgynous, and what we are taught in Genesis 2:22 is that the androgyne needed to be split into the two sexes.
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Perhaps one of the most elegant ways of focusing on the difference in the hermeneu-
6. Bloch comments that "the suppression of the story of the simultaneous creation of man and woman has far reaching implications for the history of sexuality in the West. Who knows? If the spirit of this 'lost' version of Creation had prevailed, the history of the relation between the genders, beginning for example with the Fall, might have been otherwise. Yet the priestly Genesis has been all but forgotten except for recent attempts among feminist biblical scholars to apply the force of what is seen as an original egalitarian intent" (1991a, 23). He thus protracts an occlusion as complete as the occlusion of the woman and the story of equal origin for the sexes. I mean, of course, the occlusion of the Jew and Jewish hermeneutic discourse from "the history of sexuality in the West."
 
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