Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (172 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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over cliffs and into ditches, a formulation that prefigures the eventual rabbinic notion of a single spirit composed of both potentialities at one and the same time.
On the other hand, the competing notion of the human being as being composed of two spirits, one for good and one for ill, is also found in a very famous passage of the Dead Sea
Manual of Discipline:
He created man for dominion over the earth; and he set in him two spirits for him to set his course by them until the set time of his visitation. They are the spirits of truth and of perversity. . . . It was he who created the spirits of light and darkness and upon them founded every work and upon their ways established every deed. One God loves for all eternity and in all its deeds he will rejoice forever; the otherhe loathes its assembly and all its ways he hates everlastingly. . . . But to the spirit of perversity belong a greedy mind and slackness of hands in serving righteousness, evil and lying, pride and a haughty heart, deceit and cruel treachery; hypocrisy in plenty, shortness of temper but full measure of folly and zeal in insolence; deeds abominable in a spirit of lust and ways of uncleanness in the service of impurity.
(3:134:10; Leaney 1966, 144)
Here we have perhaps the most fully realized dualistic conception of human moral psychology anywhere in ancient Jewish literature.
8
Again, what is significant about this text, what divides it from the much earlier and more common doctrine of the Two Ways, is that "two spirits" are set into the human breast. We find, therefore, that the tension within rabbinic literature between competing notions of desire existed earlier in Palestinian Judaism and was continued by the Rabbis. In the next section I take up another aspect of the rabbinic figuration of the nexus between sexual desire and the body.
Sex as Food: The Body of Desire is the Body of Procreation
Modern societies tend more and more to separate the body that reproduces, a link in an immemorial genealogical adventure, from the body that desires, a lonely object, a consumer of briefly gratifying encounters. Thus, modern man [sic] has two distinct bodies, using one or the other as he pleases. This caesura is perhaps merely the persistence of a
8. For a summary of discussion of this passage and its relation to "ethical dualism," see Gammie (1974, 381).
 
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split opened two millennia ago by the ideological victory over one part of the inhabited world of the Christian conception of carnal relation and of carnal filiationas separate from spiritual life and devalued in relation to it.
(Mopsik 1989, 49)
Perhaps the most arresting fact about the discourse of sexuality throughout the talmudic literature is that desire is nearly always concatenated with having children. We will see this well illustrated in the texts cited below in Chapter 4, where always, "improper" sexual activity is related to the production of improper children, while proper sexual behavior and intimacy produce children beautiful in body and spirit. Indeed, "procreation" [Hebrew
piriya uriviya
] is often used as a synonym for sexuality itself. We in "our'' culture
9
are quick to read this concatenation as a contamination, a devaluing of sexuality, as if it were a purely instrumental approach to the body. We readily read this view as repressive vis-à-vis Eros itself, partly because we easily associate it with the medieval church doctrine that sex is essentially sinful and is only redeemed by procreation (Gardella 1985, 10). In fact, I suggest, our reading of this connection needs to be studied anthropologically, denaturalized and accounted for. I agree with Mopsik that we reinscribe on the desiring body the very split between the carnal and the spiritual that determines our sense of the body. Mopsik's brilliant insight here makes two points. The first is that in modern culture we tend strongly to separate the functions of sexual pleasure and procreation, constructing them as, in effect, two bodies. The second point is more complex (and more directly related to the thesis of this book). It is that the split we make between desire and procreation is the continuance of the split between flesh and spirit for which Christianity was the vehicle of achieving hegemony in the West.
10
This equation is not obvious at all, for our dualism of the two bodies is ostensibly produced as the agency of a sexual liberation, as a valorization of pleasure as opposed to its utilitarian aims, while the "Christian" split is precisely both
9. I am using "our culture" here in a sense very similar to that of Mauss (1979) throughout his work, to refer to that generic European (Western European) formation. See also, "But there may be another reason that it is so gratifying for
us
to define the relationship between sex and power in terms of repression" (Foucault 1980, 6; emphasis added).
10. The reader will note that throughout my book, I have not attributed the origin of the split, but merely its propagation, to Christianity.
 
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