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<strong>Torah</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mouth</strong>, Writ<strong>in</strong>g and Oral Tradition <strong>in</strong> Palest<strong>in</strong>ian Judaism, 200 BCE - 400 CE<br />

Jaffee, Mart<strong>in</strong> S., Samuel and Al<strong>the</strong>a Stroum Professor of Jewish Studies, University of Wash<strong>in</strong>gton<br />

Pr<strong>in</strong>t publication date: 2001, Published to Oxford Scholarship Onl<strong>in</strong>e: November 2003<br />

Pr<strong>in</strong>t ISBN-13: 978-0-19-514067-5, doi:10.1093/0195140672.001.0001<br />

with<strong>in</strong> which <strong>the</strong> tradition is performed. The literary substance and performative dimensions of an oral-literary tradition have one sort of life;<br />

end p.9<br />

<strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong>oretical legitimations of <strong>the</strong> tradition as a dist<strong>in</strong>ctive cultural possession have quite ano<strong>the</strong>r.<br />

These dist<strong>in</strong>ctions are often blurred by students of rabb<strong>in</strong>ic oral tradition <strong>in</strong> particular who seek to puzzle out <strong>the</strong> connections between<br />

Second Temple Jewish oral tradition and <strong>the</strong> rabb<strong>in</strong>ic tradition of <strong>Torah</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mouth</strong>. 13 Many scholars, <strong>in</strong> my judgment, have tended to<br />

confuse <strong>the</strong> general contents of oral-literary tradition <strong>in</strong> Judaism (surely a phenomenon as old, <strong>in</strong> some cases, as ancient Israelite culture)<br />

with <strong>the</strong> rabb<strong>in</strong>ic representation of this material as <strong>Torah</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mouth</strong> (which, even on <strong>the</strong> most generous read<strong>in</strong>g of <strong>the</strong> sources, may<br />

have emerged as a technical term no earlier than <strong>the</strong> turn of <strong>the</strong> Common Era). 14 We will see later <strong>in</strong> this study, for example, that rabb<strong>in</strong>ic<br />

literature preserves many echoes of literary <strong>the</strong>mes preserved <strong>in</strong> writ<strong>in</strong>gs from <strong>the</strong> Second Temple period; but it does not follow that <strong>the</strong><br />

perpetuation of some Second Temple text-<strong>in</strong>terpretive traditions <strong>in</strong> rabb<strong>in</strong>ic literature implies a similar antiquity for ei<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> specific oral-<br />

performative tradition of <strong>the</strong> Sages or <strong>the</strong> substance of <strong>the</strong>ir oral-literary tradition. Simply put, Second Temple scribal communities<br />

certa<strong>in</strong>ly had <strong>the</strong>ir oral-literary traditions and text-<strong>in</strong>terpretive traditions, and <strong>the</strong>y mediated <strong>the</strong>m <strong>in</strong> oral-performative traditions of various<br />

k<strong>in</strong>ds. But all of this does not add up to <strong>the</strong> essential cont<strong>in</strong>uity of rabb<strong>in</strong>ic <strong>Torah</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mouth</strong> with all that went before it. Lack<strong>in</strong>g is <strong>the</strong><br />

crucial element of ideological self-consciousness.<br />

Let us restate this po<strong>in</strong>t by clarify<strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong> relationships that l<strong>in</strong>k <strong>the</strong>se three analytically dist<strong>in</strong>ct aspects of tradition of orally transmitted<br />

literature. The s<strong>in</strong>e qua non of any oral-literary tradition is, obviously, <strong>the</strong> substance and form of <strong>the</strong> texts preserved by a given society<br />

and selected for cont<strong>in</strong>ued transmission. With <strong>the</strong> exception<br />

of orally transmitted folktales, which seem to obey ra<strong>the</strong>r consistent <strong>the</strong>matic and structural pr<strong>in</strong>ciples across many cultures, 15 o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

orally transmitted literary genres are ra<strong>the</strong>r more idiosyncratic <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir <strong>the</strong>mes and degree of l<strong>in</strong>guistic fixity. 16<br />

The second necessary condition for an oral-literary tradition is <strong>the</strong> complex of social practices—<strong>the</strong> oral-performative tradition—that<br />

governs production and transmission of <strong>the</strong> texts. Dist<strong>in</strong>ct from textual substance, this aspect of oral tradition comprises <strong>the</strong><br />

<strong>in</strong>stitutionalized, conventional sett<strong>in</strong>gs for shar<strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong> traditional texts or reiterat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong>m <strong>in</strong> various sorts of performance. 17 Any oral-<br />

literary tradition must have both of <strong>the</strong>se aspects to survive, s<strong>in</strong>ce <strong>the</strong> tradition is by def<strong>in</strong>ition <strong>the</strong> sum of its texts and <strong>the</strong> processes that<br />

transmit <strong>the</strong>m. Without a transmitt<strong>in</strong>g community <strong>the</strong> texts would die, and without <strong>the</strong> texts <strong>the</strong> community would have no collective<br />

memory.<br />

In contrast, <strong>the</strong> third aspect of oral tradition—<strong>the</strong> ideological—is not necessary to its existence. It emerges only <strong>in</strong> sett<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>in</strong> which <strong>the</strong><br />

dist<strong>in</strong>ction between written and oral-literary tradition has become crucial to some sort of social undertak<strong>in</strong>g that dist<strong>in</strong>guishes <strong>the</strong> bearers<br />

of <strong>the</strong> oral tradition from those who do not bear it. This needn't always be <strong>the</strong> case. But <strong>in</strong> historical societies as diverse as those that<br />

produced <strong>the</strong> Indian Vedas and modern Balkan oral epic, bearers of <strong>the</strong> oral tradition will develop a set of ideological formulations through<br />

which <strong>the</strong>y conceive its relationship to o<strong>the</strong>r, especially written, elements of <strong>the</strong>ir literary culture. In do<strong>in</strong>g so, <strong>the</strong>y will also be th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g<br />

about <strong>the</strong> relationship of <strong>the</strong>ir own community to o<strong>the</strong>rs with whom <strong>the</strong>y share some common elements of literary tradition. The resultant<br />

ideological formations will constitute part of <strong>the</strong> rationale for susta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong> particular life of <strong>the</strong> community, even as <strong>the</strong>y expla<strong>in</strong> and<br />

defend <strong>the</strong> dist<strong>in</strong>ctive orality of <strong>the</strong> tradition. 18<br />

In <strong>the</strong> literary culture of classical Rabb<strong>in</strong>ic Judaism, <strong>the</strong> concept of <strong>Torah</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mouth</strong> corresponds to this third, ideological, aspect of oral<br />

tradition. It emerged as <strong>the</strong> dom<strong>in</strong>ant ideological trope through which rabb<strong>in</strong>ic Sages grasped <strong>the</strong> social mean<strong>in</strong>g of <strong>the</strong> performative and<br />

<strong>in</strong>terpretive dimensions of <strong>the</strong>ir oral-literary tradition. Conceived as <strong>Torah</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mouth</strong>, <strong>the</strong> actual texts transmitted as oral tradition—<strong>the</strong><br />

oral-literary tradition mentioned earlier—were correlated for <strong>the</strong>ological, hermeneutical, and jurisprudential purposes with <strong>the</strong> written<br />

Scriptures <strong>in</strong>herited by <strong>the</strong> Sages from earlier Judaism and shared with o<strong>the</strong>r Jews (and, <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly, Christians) beyond <strong>the</strong> rabb<strong>in</strong>ic<br />

social orbit. As <strong>Torah</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mouth</strong>, <strong>the</strong> second aspect of rabb<strong>in</strong>ic oral-literary tradition—its text-creat<strong>in</strong>g and text-performative process<br />

—was constructed as <strong>the</strong> embodiment of a generations-long series of transmissions that l<strong>in</strong>ked contemporary tradents and performers to<br />

ancient founders. By establish<strong>in</strong>g a l<strong>in</strong>k to past generations, however, <strong>the</strong> ideological construction of <strong>Torah</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Mouth</strong> also enforced a<br />

separation <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> present—from o<strong>the</strong>r Jews and Christians who shared Scripture but who were ignorant of, or denied, <strong>the</strong> legitimacy of <strong>the</strong><br />

rabb<strong>in</strong>ic text-<strong>in</strong>terpretive tradition that claimed to provide Scripture's exhaustive explanation.<br />

The Structure of Argument<br />

This study is, accord<strong>in</strong>gly, an extended reflection upon <strong>the</strong> relationship of ideologies of orality to <strong>the</strong> material and social foundations of<br />

textual practices <strong>in</strong> Palest<strong>in</strong>ian Judaism dur<strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong> centuries <strong>in</strong> question. Part I, focus<strong>in</strong>g entirely on <strong>the</strong> Second Temple period, unfolds <strong>in</strong><br />

three chapters.<br />

end p.10<br />

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Subscriber: Columbia University; date: 20 September 2011

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