In the Talmud, women are mostly identified as “mother of” or “wife of,” but not by name. For centuries, women were forbidden to even study the sacred work. In this unique book, Gila Fine discusses six women, all named, whose stories are told in the Talmud. She uses literary analysis to give us a contemporary look at the negative archetypes usually ascribed to these women.
The result is an entirely new perspective not only on the six women, but also on the rabbis who wrote and edited their stories and on the historical context as a whole. Thus, a single surface reading does not suffice. For a deeper, fuller understanding, each story must be reread “with fresh eyes” so that it can be approached “from a new critical direction,” as Fine writes, quoting poet Adrienne Rich.
This is typical of Fine. She employs whatever sources illuminate her subject, whether they are traditional or secular, ancient or contemporary. The Talmud stories are not revised by Fine, per se, but revisioned, understood anew.
Fine restructures each narrative as a three- or four-act drama, crossing the boundaries of literary genres. In her analyses, rabbinic figures intersect with modern literary characters, Jewish studies meets contemporary literary analysis, and psychology explains motivations.
Like many works of literature throughout the ages, rabbinic literature includes a number of seduction stories in which the woman is the temptress, and the man, her victim. One figure Fine examines in her study is “the great femme fatale of the Talmud — Homa.” A single woman, three times a widow, Homa was seen as dangerous to the men she encountered; even the most pious, it was thought, could be tempted by a beautiful woman. To protect the society, Homa was eventually expelled from the town.
This is, Fine maintains, a case of projection: Homa embodies flaws that the people dare not acknowledge in themselves. Yet, as Fine notes, the rabbis are not without sympathy for her. Her story has not been edited out of the text but is part of the “questioning, critiquing, even directly contradicting” of a halachic position that appears in the Talmud.
What can be learned from this tale, according to Fine, is that “we must be especially careful, especially compassionate, toward the Others in our midst.” It’s a timeless message from an ancient text.