Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (57 page)

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Authors: Daniel Boyarin

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BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
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Again here, we have exactly the same situation of the very zenith of the grotesque in precisely the place where the text is claiming to represent the classical. The theme of the Saint's body which does not rot after death is a topos of classical hagiography.
16
But, the grotesqueness of its handling in this text, and particularly the grotesque denouement with the worm coming out of the Rabbi's ear, suggest not a hagiography but a satire or parody on hagiographies. Although the text reduces the force of the image by moralizing it, its power "to upset" does not really disappear. If a worm is seen coming out of the ear of a corpse, the suggestion is certain that the cavity is, in fact, full of worms. In order to better understand this moment, we have to remember that until the modern period, the corpse was understood to produce the very worms that devoured it. The corpse is said "to beget" the worms, that is to give birth to them. A more powerful icon, then, of death in life and life in death, of the imbrication of death in the production of life, is hard to imagine.
17
This talmudic grotesque can hardly be said to represent the "last best word of the cosmos."
I have my doubts about Rabelais as well. Certainly the image of an infant so gigantic that he suffocates his mother in being born no more supports these rhapsodic remarks about "triumphant life" than does a corpse being consumed by the worms that it has "begotten." Indeed, where Bakhtin talks about "birth-giving death" (392), I think often we must think of "death-bringing birth."
18
Indeed, I would suggest that it is the very question of reproduction as providing the kind of "triumphant life of the people,'' the conquering of death that Bakhtin conjures, that is the source of the inner tension of our discourse. For Bakhtin's Rabelais, it is clear that his children will not only repeat the father [
sic
] and render
16. For the association of hagiography and the classical, see Brown 1983. Recently it was reported in the Israeli press that a group of French Jews buried in Paris in the mid-nineteenth century were reinterred in a mass grave in Jerusalem because their remains had been disturbed. One was found to have had his corpse preserved intact, and was given, therefore, a separate grave since this "miraculous" preservation proved his holiness. A more relevant comparison, perhaps, to a satiric reflection of this topos is of course the story of Father Zosima in
The Brothers Karamazov
. Another possible cultural source for this theme is a motif of Hellenistic romances regarding the preservation of a dead lover, which would make it a sort of early "A Rose for Emily." See Hadas (1953, 151).
17. Compare the birth of Pantagruel, as discussed in Bakhtin (1984, 328).
18. These images fit more with Paglia's conception of fecundity as being terrifying, of liquid, female nature gone wild (Paglia 1990). Where I part company with her is at two crucial and related points; one, her assumption that such images are somehow natural and not cultural in origin, and two, her enthusiastic acceptance of the values implied by the imagery of classical male and grotesque female.
 
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I protect my culture without playing false either to the historical "truth" or to my ethical commitment to changing the present gender practices of that culture? As in so many areas of thought, Franz Rosenzweig here also suggests a way, a way that he chooses to call apologetic, which is an open and frank presentation of the culture that contextualizes its practices both structurally and historically. This will have to be a presentation that refuses the arrogance of cultural Darwinism, the idea that culture evolves from less advanced to more advanced forms. It will have to be an account that is not judgmental but critical. Rather than apologetic, I shall call this mode of cultural critique (which I attempt to put into practice in this book)
generous critique
, a practice that seeks to criticize practice of the Other from the perspective of the desires and needs of here and now, without reifying that Other or placing myself in judgment over him or her in his or her there and then. I will suggest that such a practice is appropriate for any presentation of a past culture, but most imperative when the past is my own. Precisely the critique of Orientalism (Said 1979) as a practice that stands in judgment of other cultures and homogenizes them can be in turn applied to much critical, historical practice vis-à-vis our own ancestors.
As I have already said, cultural phenomena can be read in several different ways; the more complex the phenomenon, the more numerous the possibilities for reading. The texts of rabbinic Judaism and the construction that we put on the whole are therefore ambiguous, necessarily so. Later stages of Judaism have chosen to read the rabbinic texts in certain fashions and have closed off other options for reading. This does not mean that their readings were wrong or inauthentic, or that I think that I have discovered the true meaning of rabbinic Judaism, but it does leave open the possibility for other understandings of the same texts. Since our cultural situation is different from that of the medieval Rabbis, it is incumbent on us, as scholars and as cultural critics, to discover other faces in the same textsfaces that can be more useful for us in re-constructing our own versions of culture and gender practices. Such discovery would constitute an apologetic, in the degraded sense, only if it insisted on having discovered an authentic truthful interpretation that was distorted, if it hid that which is inimical to the new reading, or if it did not allow other traditions the same opportunity to be reread and reconstructed.
Let me elaborate on this last point. It has become a fairly common strategy of feminist historians of religions to ascribe true feminist impulses
 
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him immortal,
19
but "the father's new flowering in the son does not take place on the same level but on a higher degree of mankind's development. When life is reborn, it does not repeat itself, it is perfected" (Bakhtin 1984, 406 ff.). This utopian desire is, it seems, the exact contrary of the Talmud's fear that the "father's new flowering" will be a sour one, a Vinegar, son of Wine. Reproduction, then, so far from continuing one's existence into the future, only emphasizes the dissolution that death brings. The reproductive principle was not, it seems, sufficient for this culture to provide a conviction that "death hath no dominion."
Our text, however, rejecting almost entirely the utopian character of reproduction so emphasized by Bakhtin, attempts to provide its own utopian solution, substitution of the phallic mouth for the phallic penis. This substitution has been brilliantly documented and analyzed by Howard Eilberg-Schwartz (1990b, 22934). Our text shows it to be, however, the product not so much of discomfort with the body and genealogical reproduction as of despair at the failure of that ideal. The Rabbis are in a strong sense the inheritors of the priestly role in Israel. This transfer of authority is dramatized in the Talmud (Yoma 76b), where all of the people who were following the High Priest upon his departure from the Holy of Holies on the Day of Atonement turned and followed Shemaia and Avtalyon, semi-legendary founding figures of the rabbinic movement, when the latter appeared.
20
Note that the very activity in which Rabbi El'azar engages, the distinction between menstrual blood and blood that does not cause impurity, is a priestly task
par excellence
. Concerns with procreation and genealogy are critical in the Priestly culture of the Bible, and a sexually damaged priest was even disqualified from serving at the altar and blessing the people.
21
The signifier of biological filiation has a strong anchoring in the values of the culture. As such, the rabbinic mantle should have passed from father to son, as does the crown of priesthood. But it doesn't, at least not in any straightforward way. On the one hand, the Rabbis have created a sort of meritocracy to replace the religious aristocracy that the Bible ordains. Filiation is no longer from father
19. According to Elisheva Rosen, there is reason to trace Bakhtin's optimistic reading of the grotesque back to Victor Hugo (Rosen 1990, 129).
20. The issue is made even sharper there by the fact that these two Rabbis are not only not hereditary priests but converts! I am grateful to Joshua Levinson for reminding me of this source.
21. For an excellent discussion of this matter from a comparative anthropology perspective, see Eilberg-Schwartz (1990b, 14176).
 
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