Levirate Marriage and the Family in Ancient Judaism

(Darren Dugan) #1
Notes

[ 8 ]

acknowledge that a woman might prefer to avoid levirate, and even offer such a
woman some judicial support.
8. Michael Satlow, Jewish Marriage in Antiquity (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
University Press, 1), xvi.
9. Gen. 38 : 9.
1. Gen. 38 ; Ruth 3.
11. It is also possible that there were Jews, particularly in Babylonia, where
plural marriage and levirate were practiced by the majority culture, who con-
doned a man’s taking responsibility for his brother’s widow. The rabbis may have
taken a relatively neutral approach to levirate, neither promoting nor condemn-
ing it under all circumstances, but reworking it to accord with their concerns
about family, incest, and inheritance.
1. Scholars dispute the dating of the Tosefta, with some arguing for an early
third century date and others for a date as late as the fifth century.
13. A review of this discussion can be found in David C. Kraemer, The Mind of
the Talmud (New York: Oxford University Press, 199 ),  – 5.
14. Dvora Weisberg, “Levirate Marriage and Halitzah i n t he Mish na h,” Annual
of Rabbinic Judaism 1 ( 1998 ), 64 – 66 ; Dvora Weisberg, “The Babylonian Talmud’s
Treatment of Levirate Marriage,” Annual of Rabbinic Judaism 3 (), 61 – 65.
15. David C. Kraemer, ed., The Jewish Family: Metaphor and Memory (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1989 ); Shaye J. D. Cohen, ed., The Jewish Family
in Antiquity (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1993 ); Leo G. Perdue, Joseph Blenkinsopp,
John J. Collins, and Carol Meyers, Families in Ancient Israel (Louisville, Ky.:
Westminster/John Knox, 199); and Michael Broyde, ed., Marriage, Sex, and Fam-
ily in Judaism (Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 5).
16. Cohen, ed., The Jewish Family in Antiquity, . Most of the essays in the vol-
ume make this point.
1. Satlow, Jewish Marriage in Antiquity, 18 – 188.



  1. The Institution of Levirate (pages 1 – )

    1. Howard Eilberg-Schwartz, The Savage in Judaism (Bloomington: Indiana
      University Press, 199 ),  – 1.
      . See Chapter .

    2. For an extensive discussion of the uses of cross-cultural comparison to
      deepen our understanding of ancient Judaism, see Eilberg-Schwartz, The Sav-
      age in Judaism. Eilberg-Schwartz notes that the requirement that widows marry
      “their nearest male relatives” was one of the commonalities anthropologists
      noted between American Indians and the ancient Israelites (3).

    3. See Eilberg-Schwartz, The Savage in Judaism, on changes in anthropolo-
      gists’ approaches to “primitive” cultures.

    4. G. Robina Quale, A History of Marriage Systems (Westport, Conn.: Green-
      wood Press, 1988 ), 1.

    5. Quale, A History of Marriage Systems, 6.
      . Betty Potash, “Widows in Africa: An Introduction,” in Betty Potash, ed.,
      Widows in African Societies: Choices and Constraints (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford
      University Press, 1986 ), .

    6. Jane Guyer, “Beti Widow Inheritance and Marriage Law,” in Potash, ed.,
      Widows in African Society,  – 4.

    7. Ghost ma r r iage wa s pract iced by t he Zu lu a nd t he Nuer, who a lso employed
      levirate when a man left a widow. See Max Gluckman, “Kinship and Marriage
      Among the Lozi of Northern Rhodesia and the Zulu of Natal,” in A. R. Radcliffe-



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