Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (36 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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6
Studying Women
Resistance from within the Male Discourse
In Late Antique society, gender stereotypes that assigned certain virtues to each sex but not the other surely became obstacles to the achievement of human wholeness, especially for people who sought the broader and deeper forms of perfection envisaged by some philosophers, Jews and Christians. The question then becomes, were significant ways found within the culture to overcome these obstacles?
(Harrison 1992)
Several recent writers on the history of women's religion have made the disturbing point that in ascetic religious formations, women paradoxically achieve autonomy and power that they seem to have nowhere else in late antiquity, or at all. This has been discussed in regard to the Therapeutae by Ross Kraemer (1989) and for early Latin Christianity by Clark (1986, 180 and throughout; see also McNamara 1976). Virginity was considered to make it possible for women to be "as men," or even for the distinction of gender to be abolished entirely, and this abolition was a major goal of sexual renunciation for women, as was freedom of another sort for men (Harrison 1990b and forthcoming; Aspegren 1990; Meyer 1985; Castelli 1986 and 1991; Clark 1986; Fiorenza 1983, 90; Warner 1976, 72). This tendency was not exclusively Christian, for in perhaps the only case of a post-biblical Jewish woman who functioned as an independent religious authority on the same level as men, the famous nineteenth century "Maid of Ludmir," precisely the same mechanism operates. Indeed, as soon as she engaged in marriage, at the age of forty, at the urging of male religious authoritiesand a celibate marriage at thather religious power disappeared,
because she had revealed that she really was a woman, and not a man in a woman's body
(Rapoport-Alpert 1988; David Biale 1991). There are modern religious groups, too, in which celibacy has been the condition for achievement of full autonomy and political equality for women, the obvious example of which is the Shakers (Kitch 1989).
 
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Page 168
Autonomy and power are bought for women at the cost of their sexuality, precisely as would be predicted by certain radical feminist theorists, who argue that sexuality itself (or at any rate, heterosexuality) is inevitably domination. On the other hand, rabbinic Judaism, as I hope to have shown till now, so strongly approved the married life, including the life of the sexual body, that there was virtually no escape from marriage within that cultureeither for men or for women. Since marriage seems inevitably to have led to androcentric domination, the body was bought, it seems, at the price of autonomy, especially for womena bleak picture indeed. In this chapter, I shall consider some intimations from within the rabbinic formation of the possibility of an escape from this implacable dilemma.
1
Classical talmudic Judaism denies women access to the most valued practice of the culture, the study of Torah.
2
The significance of this exclusion has been discussed by many scholars, most recently by Peter Brown in his monumental
The Body and Society: Men, Women and Sexual
1. For a similar (and very impressive) effort to find such a break in the Christian monolith, see Harrison 1990b and 1991. Harrison argues that for certain Christian thinkers, transcendence of gender went in both directions, with men transcending their maleness and assimilating female characteristics and women doing the opposite. But more common, it seems, was Philo's schema whereby perfection for both meant overcoming the feminine, a task even harder for women than for men (Genevieve Lloyd 1984, 2627). In general, Harrison's splendid work should move us away from simple equations by which sexual renunciation is identified with contempt for the body, sexuality, and women. Even radical asceticism is not necessarily the product of such an ideology, and the fact that both men and women equally renounce sexuality in such religious groups is also not to be ignored.
2. This formulation already points up the paradox of my very inquiry here: the assumption that Judaism is "male" and can deny or impart to women some "privilege." When I presented this chapter at the University of California at Berkeley, a question was raised by Naomi Seidman as to the historical significance of this evidence from the point of view of feminist historiography. In brief, the question was, why should we assume that the learning of Torah was relevant to women? Is it not a reproduction of the same value system even to assume that study of Torah would have been attractive to women, that it is something that they would have wanted to be "let in on," given the androcentrism of that Torah's content? Plaskow 1990 is effectively asking this question also. Perhaps a feminist historiography must reconstruct entirely different models of Jewish piety in order to be meaningful at all. The question is challenging and legitimate, but rather than make any attempt to address that issue here, I prefer to present the analysis that I have made of the texts and leave the question of its significance for feminist practice for another essay (Boyarin 1993). The short answer is that for many women it seems to be important to have a vital connection with the historical, ancestral culture of their people, in this case the Jews, and that providing a place for feminist women (and male fellow travelers) to retain a positive sense of such identity seems to me consequential and empowering for such people.
 
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Page 169
Renunciation in Early Christianity
(1988, 118 and especially 145). It has been much less recognized, however, that there are voices within the texts that oppose this exclusion. These voices can be placed, moreover, within a certain time frame and geographical subset of the rabbinic culture; the exclusion itself has a history. It is a measure of Brown's sophistication as a scholar that he warns:
The reader must always bear in mind the composite nature of any overall presentation of Judaism, drawn as it is largely from the Palestinian and Babylonian Talmudthat is, from writings of widely differing periods and regions. Such sources may serve to delineate certain general horizons and to emphasize certain options taken among the rabbis of Palestine and Babylonia in the course of the late antique period; but they can be used only with great caution.
(Brown 1988, 35 n. 7)
But it must be emphasized that much more can be made of the talmudic texts on these issues than has been done until now. By careful, symptomatic reading of the Talmuds and cognate texts, the traces of more than one ideological strain can be teased out precisely on this vitally important issue. As in the case of the marriage of Rabbi Akiva in the preceding chapter, an underlying assumption upon which this chapter is based is that the amount of energy expended by a culture to suppress or marginalize an ideological voice serves as a reliable index to the effectiveness of that voice as posing a threat to the hegemonic practices of that culture (Macherey 1978).
My major contention is that there was a significant difference between the Babylonian and Palestinian Talmuds with regard to the empowering (or disempowering) of women to study Torah. Both in the Palestinian and in the Babylonian text the dominant discourse suppressed women's voices in the House of Study. These texts, however, provide evidence that in Palestine a dissident voice was tolerated, while in Babylonia this issue seems to have been so threatening that even a minority voice had to be entirely expunged. It must be emphasized, however, that this evidence alone is not self-interpreting, because the suppression of this voice in Babylonia could mean two opposite things: either that women never had access to the study of Torah there, or that women often studied Torah in Babylonia; if the latter is the case, it presumably produced the panicky reaction evident in the text. The historical effect of the Babylonian text, however, which was hegemonic for later European Jewish culture, was to suppress quite thoroughly the possibilities for women to study Torah until
 
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