Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (169 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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inseparable from evil, because they are one and the same force. When one is strengthened, the other is necessarily strengthened as well:
And the Northern [or "hidden"] one, I will remove from among you:
[Joel 2:21]: This is the Evil Desire which is hidden and present in the heart of man. . . .
For it has performed mightily
[ibid.]: Said Abbaye: "Among the Torah-scholars more than anyone." As in the story of Abbaye who heard a certain man saying to a woman, "Let us get up early and go together on the way." He [Abbaye] said: ''I will go and separate them from doing that which is forbidden." He went behind them for three parasangs in a meadow. When they separated from each other, he heard them, saying "Our way is long, and our company is sweet.'' Said Abbaye, "If that had been me, I would not have been able to control myself." He went and swung on the door-hinge [a sign of depression] and was miserable. A certain old man came by and taught him, "Everyone who is greater than his fellow, his Desire is greater also."
(Babylonian Talmud Sukkah 52a)
Abbaye hears that an unmarried man and woman are to travel together, which he is certain will lead to illicit sex. How surprised and depressed he is when he discovers that they travel easily in each other's company, enjoy it, and then part when they arrive at the crossroads that leads to their respective villages. Abbaye's depression is generated by his self-understanding that he would not have been able to part from her without having sex (or at least trying to)and he a great Rabbi, while
they
are only simple villagers. The tension is resolved (and the depression lifted) by the explanation presented in the story in the guise of an anonymous old manthe sort of character who frequently serves, along with children, to purvey truths in talmudic texts. The very passion that drives Abbaye to study Torah and become a "great man," which for the Rabbis always means one learned in and devoted to Torah, is the same passion that would have prevented him from simply saying good-bye to the woman and parting from her without sex. The desire is one, and the only way for the man of great desire to keep himself out of sin is simply to stay out of its way. The same drive that in the study-house will lead a man to study Torah will in bed lead him to have intercourse with his wife, and this is the very same drive that will lead him into sin when he is alone with a woman to whom he is not married. The passion is one.
4
4. Another reading of this story, complementary with the first, would have it fit the Foucauldian paradigm perfectly. What Abbaye is saying is that the "naive," who
(footnote continued on the next page)
 
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But other sayings on the same page of the Talmud (and in many other places [Porter 1901, 128]) indicate that Torah is the cure for the Evil Desire, suggesting a dualistic notion in which Desire is not the driving force of Torah but its enemy. My hypothesis is that the anthropology more generally held among Jews of this period was the dualist one, and that the dialectical one is an antithesis to that widespread construction (Porter 1901, 125). The use of the term Evil Desire, then, to refer to this dialectically composed force of Good and Evil would be partly a relic of the other structure and partly a purposefully paradoxical way of undermining that structure.
5
What could be more dramatic than the declaration that the Evil Desire was declared by God to be "very good"? Indeed, there are many rabbinic texts that reflect the dualist psychology, whereby the human being possesses two opposed inclinations, one good and one evil, which are at war in his or her breast. Typical of such a psychology is the quotation, "Let a man always incite his Good Desire against his Evil Desire" (Berakhot 5a). And it is on this version of rabbinic psychology that the Talmud could declare: "There are four things that God is sorry that he created: exile, Chaldeans, Ishmaelim, and the Evil Desire" (Babylonian Talmud Sukkah 52b; also Palestinian Talmud Ta'anith 66a, but
(footnote continued from the previous page)
have not studied Torah and therefore do not know of the terrible power of Desire, are also not so plagued by precisely that power. The study of Torah, with its system of controls on sexuality, arouses and strengthens desire as effectively as (or even more effectively than) it restrains and constrains it. Therefore, one who is greater in Torah than his fellow has greater sexual desire as well. This is a perfect example of Foucault's "effects that may be those of refusal, blockage, and invalidation, but also incitement and intensification: in short, the 'polymorphous techniques of power'" (Foucault 1980, 11).
5. I do not attempt to place the two concepts in a chronological order. On the one hand, the monistic, dialectical view may be a survival of an earlier biblical conception. On the other hand, it may be a reaction against Hellenistic or Persian dualist anthropologiesor it may be both at one and the same time! Compare the view of Porter:
The good impulse is rarely spoken of, and probably cannot be traced so far back, and
yeçer
frequently stands unmodified and always in the evil sense. This in itself suggests the error of connecting the evil
yeçer
with the body, the good with the soul, making them expressions of the character of two equally essential parts of man. Rather it is the nature of man as a whole that is in mind, and in it the evil tendency, or disposition, dominates.
(1901, 109)
I am inclined to think that a good monographic study would be able to introduce more precise chronology, but that lies beyond the scope of the present work. My only dissent from Porter here would be in his assumption that for the "dialectical" or monistic position it is clear that the evil tendency dominates. Porter's work remains excellent and ought to be referred to more often.
 
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