Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture (8 page)

Read Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture Online

Authors: Daniel Boyarin

Tags: #Religion, #Judaism, #General

BOOK: Carnal Isræl: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
3.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Amemar said: Who are the Ministering Angels? The Rabbis, for if you say literally: Ministering Angels, then why did Rabbi Yohanan say that the law is not like Rabbi Yohanan the son of Dabai? After all, they certainly know embryology! And why does he call them "Ministering Angels"? Because they are excellent like the Ministering Angels.
A certain woman came before Rabbi [an honorific title of Rabbi Yehudah the Prince], and said to him: Rabbi: I set him a table, and he turned it over. He said to her: My daughter, The Torah has permitted you, and I, what can I do for you?
A certain woman came before Rabbi. She said to him: Rabbi, I set him the table, and he turned it over. He said: How is the case different from fish?
And you shall not wander after your hearts
[Num. 16:39]From hence Rabbi said: Let not a man drink from this cup and have his mind on another cup.
1. "Turning the tables" may refer to anal intercourse, or to vaginal intercourse from behind, or even just to vaginal intercourse with the woman on top. The male, understood in any case as the active partner, is the one "held responsible." The next sentences make clear that the male partner is the subject here, because "that place" always refers to the female genitals.
2. This latter part of the text is quoted in Chapter I above. Rabbi Eliezer's behavior, which is not my theme here, is interpreted there.
 
< previous page
page_110
next page >
< previous page
page_111
next page >
Page 111
Ravina said: It was not necessary [to say this], except for even when both of them are his wives [i.e., when the women are not both his wives it is obvious that he must not think of another woman while he sleeps with his wife, but this comes to teach us that even when he is married to both of them, he is forbidden to have his mind on one while he has sex with the other].
And I will remove from you the rebellious ones and the criminals
[Ezek. 20:39]Said Rabbi Levi: These are nine categories:
Children of fright; children of rape; children of a despised woman; children of excommunication; children of exchange; children of strife; children of drunkenness; children of one whom he has divorced in his heart; children of mixture; children of a brazen woman.
Indeed? But did not Shmuel the son of Nahmani say that Rabbi Yohanan
3
said: Any man whose wife approaches him sexually will have children such as were unknown even in the generation of Moses. . . .
That refers to a case where she arouses him [but does not explicitly and verbally request sex].
This is, perhaps, the single most extended and important text on the techniques of married sex in the talmudic literature. It is an excellent demonstration, moreover, of the dangers of quoting a talmudic citation out of the dialectic context in which it is embedded. The text has to be read in two modes. At one level, it has to be read for the ideology of the redactor[s], but at the same time, the contrary ideologies of the sources cited and problematized by those redactors have to be taken into account.
The Talmud here thematizes two kinds of control over sexual behavior in the conjugal bed. One has to do with the actual practices engaged in and the other with the affective state of the couple. The first type of control is renounced by the text, while the second is strongly supported. In addition, as we will see below, the two types of control are actually thematized as mutually oppositional to each other. After a general statement of the requirement of modesty for Jewish people, both men and women, the Talmud cites a source that is ostensibly a prescription for the enactment of modest behavior. This text has one strikingly unusual feature, namely, that it is a report of a conversation with the Ministering Angels. In all of the Talmud, there is no other report of an attempt by the Ministering Angels to impose their halakhic or moral ideas on human beings. Indeed, in the only places in the Talmud where knowing the speech of angels is referred to as part of the knowledge of an outstanding sage, this
3. Variant: Yonathan.

Other books

Dangerous Lines by Moira Callahan
Chasing Harry Winston by Lauren Weisberger
Do Dead People Walk Their Dogs? by Bertoldi, Concetta
Magic of Thieves by C. Greenwood
Die Happy by J. M. Gregson
Chronicles of Eden - Act VIII by Alexander Gordon
Near To You by King, Asha