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A sugya is a self-contained passage of the
Talmud The Talmud (; ) is the central text of Rabbinic Judaism and the primary source of Jewish religious law (''halakha'') and Jewish theology. Until the advent of Haskalah#Effects, modernity, in nearly all Jewish communities, the Talmud was the cen ...
that typically discusses a
mishnah The Mishnah or the Mishna (; , from the verb ''šānā'', "to study and review", also "secondary") is the first written collection of the Jewish oral traditions that are known as the Oral Torah. Having been collected in the 3rd century CE, it is ...
or other rabbinic statement, or offers an aggadic narrative.; see for overview. While the sugya is a literary unit in the Jerusalem Talmud, the term is most often used for passages in the
Babylonian Talmud The Talmud (; ) is the central text of Rabbinic Judaism and the primary source of Jewish religious law (''halakha'') and Jewish theology. Until the advent of modernity, in nearly all Jewish communities, the Talmud was the centerpiece of Jewi ...
, which is the primary focus of religious and academic readings of sugyot (plural form). Religious and academic scholars of Talmud have identified numerous sugyot, though there is no definitive listing or count. Individual sugyot have been explained for readers, taught as curricular units, and analyzed by historians and other scholars.


Definition

The term sugya (pl. sugyot) is derived from the Aramaic ''segi'' (סגי), which means to go, and it refers to "a self-contained basic unit of Talmudic discussion". Sugya is also used in the Talmud for a narrower meaning, as the course or trend (lit. a "going") of a discussion. It may also refer to a lesson on rabbinic law (''
halakha ''Halakha'' ( ; , ), also Romanization of Hebrew, transliterated as ''halacha'', ''halakhah'', and ''halocho'' ( ), is the collective body of Judaism, Jewish religious laws that are derived from the Torah, Written and Oral Torah. ''Halakha'' is ...
'') given in a rabbinical setting, such as a yeshiva. Sugyot are sometimes marked in the Vilna edition of the Talmud by a colon, but not consistently or reliably. There are 2,711 pages of Talmud and 517 chapters, but the number of sugyot is not known. Scholars have methodically identified sugyot for selected chapters, for example: 42 sugyot in the 12 pages of Berakhot ch.1, 47 sugyot in 10 pages of Berakhot ch.7, 39 sugyot in 10 pages of Eruvin ch.10, 20 sugyot in 8 pages of Pesachim ch. 4, 12 sugyot in 3 pages of Sanhedrin ch.5, 19 sugyot in
Shabbat Shabbat (, , or ; , , ) or the Sabbath (), also called Shabbos (, ) by Ashkenazi Hebrew, Ashkenazim, is Judaism's day of rest on the seventh day of the seven-day week, week—i.e., Friday prayer, Friday–Saturday. On this day, religious Jews ...
ch.6, and 53 sugyot in 15 pages of two chapters in Sukkot.


Types of sugya

A sugya is literary construct that puts together several sources. It includes commentary on a ''tannaitic'' statement, either the particular
mishnah The Mishnah or the Mishna (; , from the verb ''šānā'', "to study and review", also "secondary") is the first written collection of the Jewish oral traditions that are known as the Oral Torah. Having been collected in the 3rd century CE, it is ...
, which is the organizing topic for any given section of Talmud, or a '' baraita'', which is also from the period of the ''tannaim'' rabbis (until about 200 CE). A sugya also builds upon ''amoraic'' statements (''memra''), attributed to intermediate generations of rabbis, or a brief unit known as an ''amoraic sugya'', which presents a debate among amoraic rabbis. In the Babylonian Talmud, the sugyot are compositions, created by generations of editors, that are framed by an anonymous literary structure. This anonymous layer, or ''stam ha-Talmud'', is associated by historians with the stammaim or
savoraim ''Savora'' (; Aramaic language, Aramaic: סבורא, "a reasoner", plural ''Savora'im'', ''Sabora'im'' , סבוראים) is a term used in Jewish law and history to signify one among the leading rabbis living from the end of period of the ''Amora ...
rabbis (500-600 CE). Sugyot vary in length, structure, and complexity. Some refer to other sugyot, which is a clue to their historical development, and some move blocks of text to a different chapter or tractate of the Talmud. The typical sugya presents an argument among rabbis, with a "give and take, proof and rejection, question and answer" style that is structured by a Talmudic vocabulary. A sugya may also comprise or incorporate a Talmudic narrative, or other kind of
aggadah Aggadah (, or ; ; 'tales', 'legend', 'lore') is the non-legalistic exegesis which appears in the classical rabbinic literature of Judaism, particularly the Talmud and Midrash. In general, Aggadah is a compendium of rabbinic texts that incorporat ...
. Starting in the 1970s, scholars recognized that the opening sugya to some Talmudic chapters (especially at the beginning of tractate, such as Kiddushin) had a peculiar character and literary structure, associated with a later stage of redaction and composition.Elman, Yaakov. "The World of the ‘Sabboraim." In Rubenstein, Jeffrey L., ed. ''Creation and Composition: the Contribution of the Bavli Redactors (Stammaim) to the Aggada.'' Mohr Sieback, 2005: 384-415. Besides the textual analysis, Yaakov Elman stated that these opening sugyot may reflect the cultures of their time. The Babylonian Talmud also has a "conceptual sugya" that analyzes in-depth a legal principle, which are usually not found in the Jerusalem Talmud or earlier documents. According to Leib Moscovitz, "Such passages generally analyze a group of tannaitic sources in light of the specified principle, which is assumed to apply to all the cases cited; these cases may be adduced either to support or to refute the relevant principle." Parallel sugyot also exist, not only between the two Talmuds, but also within the Babylonian Talmud corpus. In 1974, for example, Louis Jacobs examined four sugyot about efforts stymied by circumstances beyond one's control.


Analysis of sugyot


Talmudic commentary

Since the writing of the Babylonian Talmud can be terse and difficult to follow,
Rashi Shlomo Yitzchaki (; ; ; 13 July 1105) was a French rabbi who authored comprehensive commentaries on the Talmud and Hebrew Bible. He is commonly known by the List of rabbis known by acronyms, Rabbinic acronym Rashi (). Born in Troyes, Rashi stud ...
and other medieval rabbis offer glosses and commentaries to explain the basic meaning and unfolding of each sugya. The next generation of commentary, the
Tosafot The Tosafot, Tosafos or Tosfot () are Middle Ages, medieval commentaries on the Talmud. They take the form of critical and explanatory glosses, printed, in almost all Talmud editions, on the outer margin and opposite Rashi's notes. The authors o ...
, serve to deal with problems in the sugya (or its Rashi commentary), including inconsistencies with sugyot elsewhere in the Talmud. In rabbinic commentaries about the Talmud, some authors focus on less on the details of the text and more on the whole sugya. Rabbenu Hananel exemplifies this approach to elucidating a sugya.


Historical and literary analysis

The academic study of the sugya was influenced by a medieval history of the Talmud by Sherira ben Hanina, one of the 10th C.
geonim ''Geonim'' (; ; also Romanization of Hebrew, transliterated Gaonim, singular Gaon) were the presidents of the two great Talmudic Academies in Babylonia, Babylonian Talmudic Academies of Sura Academy , Sura and Pumbedita Academy , Pumbedita, in t ...
, though eventually research pursued independent hypotheses. In the early years of
Jewish studies Jewish studies (or Judaic studies; ) is an academic discipline centered on the study of Jews and Judaism. Jewish studies is interdisciplinary and combines aspects of history (especially Jewish history), Middle Eastern studies, Asian studies, ...
and Wissenschaft des Judentums, scholars accepted the traditionalist view that the sugya reflected the actual deliberations of ancient Talmudic academies. In the latter part of the 20th C., scholars uncovered the literary and redactional histories of the Babylonian Talmud and its sugyot. Hyman Klein pioneered the detection of historical layers by their linguistic features. Scholars came to recognize the " anonymous voice" of the Talmud as creative redactors with their own jargon, concepts in
halakha ''Halakha'' ( ; , ), also Romanization of Hebrew, transliterated as ''halacha'', ''halakhah'', and ''halocho'' ( ), is the collective body of Judaism, Jewish religious laws that are derived from the Torah, Written and Oral Torah. ''Halakha'' is ...
, and "dialectical commentary". To separate the layers in a given Babylonian sugya, research had to go beyond its internal features, linguistic or stylistic, and examine parallel texts, especially the sugyot of the Palestinian Talmud.Moscovitz, Leib. "'The Holy Blessed One Be He... Does Not Permit the Righteous to Stumble': Reflections on the Development of a Remarkable BT Theologoumenon." In Rubenstein, Jeffrey L., ed. ''Creation and Composition: the Contribution of the Bavli Redactors (Stammaim) to the Aggada.'' Mohr Sieback, 2005: In a detailed study of Babylonian use of the Palestinian Talmud, Alyssa Gray put 44 sugyot into 6 categories: # taking a sugya from the same mishnah in the same order, # building a sugya from texts marked by the Palestinian editors, # close parallel to the Palestinian Talmud sugya, # placing materials under a different mishnah in the tractate, # using same mishnah to present aggadic narrative, and # using the same mishnah to expand on Palestinian Talmud's writing that goes beyond previous tannaitic sources. Indeed, the anonymous editors of the Babylonian Talmud did not merely build sugyot around the earlier statements attributed to amoraim, they reformulated the amoraic content, as Yaakov Sussman and Shamma Friedman found. Scholars have stated that elements of sugyot could have been invented as if written by earlier rabbis, the amoraim, as well as tannaitic statements emended by the redactors. Moreover, sugyot may be composed by drawing upon amoraic or even stammaitic texts from other, unrelated tractates. In a sugya, a halakhah (legal position) taken by the Mishnah, the layer of the tannaim, may be significantly reinterpreted by amoraim associated with the Gemara of the Talmud. This reinterpretation may, in turn, again have been reworked by the anonymous stammaim into a quite different legal ruling, as Kulp and Rogoff show with a sugya (''Ketubot'' 80b) about a man taking a vow to excuse himself from a religious obligation. Within a sugya, there may be variant presentations of a Talmudic argument. While once thought to be scribal errors, Eliezer Shimshon Rosenthal found that these are compositions, same content but expressed differently, were written in the 6-7th centuries, later than most of the Talmud. According to Talmudist Stephen G. Wald, the variant readings "reflect an attitude of relative freedom and independence toward the talmudic text, one which allows itself to rephrase or reformulate the language of the tradition... ndrepresent authentic alternative traditions which were originally propagated at the very center of talmudic authority – the Babylonian yeshivot themselves." According to Moscovitz, the anonymous editors also can be said to have recontextualized the amoraic material to generate quite new meanings. Along similar lines, Daniel Boyarin argued that these 5-6th Century redactors created an appealing historical background to their own rabbinic institutions by revising earlier legends into sugyot about Yohanan ben Zakkai and Yavne. The Babylonian Talmud thereby attributed the emphasis on prayer, the centrality of Talmud, and the theological foundations of later rabbinic Judaism to the legendary shift to a proto-rabbinic academy in Yavne. Boyarin also stated that this reflected "epistemic shifts within Christian culture."


Contemporary Jewish responses

The sugya may serve as the literary springboard to Jewish religious, literary, and philosophical expositions. Notably,
Emmanuel Levinas Emmanuel Levinas (born Emanuelis Levinas ; ; 12 January 1906 – 25 December 1995) was a French philosopher of Lithuanian Jewish ancestry who is known for his work within Jewish philosophy, existentialism, and phenomenology, focusing on the rel ...
learned with the mysterious Monsieur Chouchani and presented a series of nine Talmudic readings, starting in 1960, that interpreted and transformed each sugya into philosophical discourse. The sugyot are '' Bava Kamma'' 60a-b ("Damages Due to Fire"), Bava Metsia 83a-b ("Judaism and Revolution"), Berakhot 61a ("And God Created Woman"), Nazir 66a-b ("The Youth of Israel"), Sanhedrin 36b-37a ("As Old as the World?"), Sanhedrin 67a-68a ("Desacralization and Disenchantment"), Shabbat 88a-b ("The Temptation of Temptation"), Sotah 34b-35a ("Promised Land or Permitted Land"), Yoma 85a-85b ("Toward the Other") An expert on sugyot, Judith Hauptman, wrote a book that interprets the layers of Talmudic views, tannaitic and amoraic, as reflecting a proto-feminist approach, a "growing sympathy for women" that resulted in improvements in Jewish law, creating a "more nuanced
patriarchy Patriarchy is a social system in which positions of authority are primarily held by men. The term ''patriarchy'' is used both in anthropology to describe a family or clan controlled by the father or eldest male or group of males, and in fem ...
than is generally assumed." The book's topics include inheritance, rape and seduction, the sotah (wife accused of infidelity), and the menstrual purity regulations known as
niddah A niddah (alternative forms: nidda, nida, or nidah; ''nidá''), in traditional Judaism, is a woman who has experienced a uterine discharge of blood (most commonly during menstruation), or a woman who has menstruated and not yet completed the ...
. Aviva Richman analyzes a sugya by melding the religious, "devotional" reading of the Talmud with the "relativistic" methodology of modern historical criticism. The sugya (''Ketubot'' 51b) considers whether a sex act that began as coercion by the man, yet ends up with the woman's consent, and Richman states that the anonymous redactors were handling disputed stances on female sexuality and ensuring that "the female subject is part of the Talmud's theorizing of the self." In a multi-volume series, Noam Zion presented and examined ''Talmudic Marital Dramas''. Overall, the series covers 23 Babylonian Talmud sugyot, one in the Palestinian Talmud, and four from collections of midrash.


Noteworthy sugyot

Jon Levinsohn, a Jewish studies professor, solicited input and compiled an ''ad hoc'' list of 66 important sugyot. Those that received multiple mentions are: * Avodah Zarah 17b-18b: the execution of Haninah ben Teradion * Berakhot 5a-b: sickness and suffering * Berakhot 19b-20a: when divine commands threaten human dignity * Berakhot 35a: blessings (
berakhah In Judaism, a ''berakhah'', ''bracha'', ', ' (; pl. , ''berakhot'', '; "benediction," "blessing") is a formula of blessing or thanksgiving, recited in public or private, usually before the performance of a commandment, or the enjoyment of food o ...
) for benefits from God's world * Berakhot 35b:
Torah study Torah study is the study of the Torah, Hebrew Bible, Talmud, responsa, rabbinic literature, and similar works, all of which are Judaism's Sifrei kodesh, religious texts. According to Rabbinic Judaism, the study is done for the purpose of the ''mi ...
and livelihood * Bava Metzia 21a-22b: Is it possible to acquire lost property? * Bava Metzia 59b: the Oven of Akhnai *
Eruvin An eruv is a religious-legal enclosure which permits carrying in certain areas on Shabbat. Eruv may also refer to: * '' Eruvin (Talmud)'', a tractate in ''Moed'' * Eruv tavshilin ("mixing of cooked dishes"), which permits cooking on a Friday H ...
13b: Elu ve-elu, these and those are the words of the living God (Eruvin 13b) * Gittin 56a: Yohanan ben Zakkai's escape from Jerusalem * Hagigah 14b: the Pardes (legend) *
Pesachim Pesachim (, lit. "Paschal lambs" or "Passovers"), also spelled Pesahim, is the third tractate of '' Seder Moed'' ("Order of Festivals") of the Mishnah and of the Talmud. The tractate discusses the topics related to the Jewish holiday of Passove ...
108a, 116a: the
Passover Seder The Passover Seder is a ritual feast at the beginning of the Jewish holidays, Jewish holiday of Passover. It is conducted throughout the world on the eve of the 15th day of Nisan in the Hebrew calendar (i.e., at the start of the 15th; a Hebrew d ...
*
Sanhedrin The Sanhedrin (Hebrew and Middle Aramaic , a loanword from , 'assembly,' 'sitting together,' hence ' assembly' or 'council') was a Jewish legislative and judicial assembly of either 23 or 70 elders, existing at both a local and central level i ...
74a-b: three cardinal sins requiring
self-sacrifice in Jewish law Self-sacrifice is required in Jewish law for rare yet specifically defined circumstances, in which a Jew is expected to sacrifice their own life rather than violate a religious prohibition. The core principle of self-sacrifice, ''yehareg ve'al ya' ...
In his introduction to the Talmud, Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz cited ''Shabbat'' 66b to exemplify a sugya on a theme and ''Sanhedrin'' 33a for a sugya that derives rabbinic law from tannaitic statements. Other sample passages include ''Berakhot'' 2a-3a (in Holtz), ''Kiddushin'' 31b on honoring parents (in Schiffman). Among the sugyot highlighted in academic research, a notable example is the sugya (or series of sugyot) analyzed by Shamma Friedman, who identified the structure and compositional layers created by the anonymous editors of the Babylonian Talmud, the stammaim. While Friedman focused on legal texts, he also found "creative editorial reworking" throughout the Talmud. David Weiss Halivni also conducted extensive source criticism and form criticism of Talmudic sugyot, as in his ''Mekorot u-Mesorot'' volumes, with his analysis of
Bava Batra Bava Batra (also Baba Batra; ) is the third of the three Talmudic tractates in the Talmud in the order Nezikin; it deals with a person's responsibilities and rights as the owner of property. It is part of Judaism's oral law. Originally it, to ...
(civil law) sugyot most accessible to English readers. Jeffrey Rubenstein's work on the aggadic sugyot began with the sugya on the destruction of the Second Temple in ''Gittin'' (which leads into ben Zakkai's escape, noted above), a popular reading for the somber fast day of
Tisha b'Av Tisha B'Av ( ; , ) is an annual fast day in Judaism. A commemoration of a number of disasters in Jewish history, primarily the destruction of both Solomon's Temple by the Neo-Babylonian Empire and the Second Temple by the Roman Empire in Jerusal ...
. Moscovitz analyzed an extensive conceptual sugya (at ''Sanhedrin'' 47b–48b) about the legal principle of designation (hazmanah), such as setting aside an object for Temple offerings. He concludes that the sugya was constructed to handle earlier discussions in the Palestinian Talmud, to "display intellectual virtuosity" with legal and conceptual problems, and for literary purposes. He considers the sugya "a literary and conceptual tour de force that reflects rabbinic conceptual thought and abylonian Talmudcompositional and redactional techniques at their most sophisticated." The ''afikoman'' of the Passover Seder is the subject of a sugya (''Pesachim'' 119b-120a) analyzed by Kulp and Rogoff, listed by Levisohn, and mentioned in popular Jewish media. Likewise, the ''lulav'' of the festival Sukkot is the topic of a sugya in academic and popular Jewish discourse. in 2019, folklore scholar Dina Stein examined a sugya (Nedarim 66a-b) about rabbis who overrode the vows that husbands made toward their wives. According to Stein, the sugya tells four stories that convey the institutional power of language—vows and their annulment—with women as linguistic figures in a patriarchal discourse. In the comic fourth episode, with plays on the vocabulary of the Babylonian husband and Palestinian wife, a rabbi's
speech act In the philosophy of language and linguistics, a speech act is something expressed by an individual that not only presents information but performs an action as well. For example, the phrase "I would like the mashed potatoes; could you please pas ...
s approve the wife's conduct. Drawing on
Pierre Bourdieu Pierre Bourdieu (, ; ; ; 1 August 1930 – 23 January 2002) was a French sociologist and public intellectual. Bourdieu's contributions to the sociology of education, the theory of sociology, and sociology of aesthetics have achieved wide influ ...
's theory of symbolic power, Stein states that the sugya suggests that women "cannot fully be policed" while both language and women are negotiated by the husbands and rabbis, with the sugya itself aiming to prove that rabbis have the linguistic skills to maintain their dominance. Other sugyot that have earned scrutiny include Bava Kamma 2a on four categories of civil damage, Bava Kamma 31a-b on chain reaction accidents, Nazir 2b on identifying as a nazirite, and Yoma 82a on children fasting.


See also

* The Heart Knows its Own Bitterness (Yoma 83a) * Moses sees Rabbi Akiva (Menachot 29b) * Three Oaths (Ketubot 111a)


Further reading

* Brandes, Yehuda. "The conceptual significance of the prefatory sugya in the Babylonian Talmud." ''Journal of Jewish Studies'' 69, no. 1 (2018): 22-43. https://doi.org/10.18647/3349/jjs-2018 * Boyarin, Daniel. ''Socrates and the fat rabbis''. University of Chicago Press, 2009. * Gray, Alyssa M. "A Bavli Sugya and Its Two Yerushalmi Parallels: Issues of Literary Relationship and Redaction." ''How should rabbinic literature be read in the modern world?'' (2006): 35-78. * Jacobs, Louis. "The Sugya on Sufferings in B. "Berakhot 5a, b."" In ''Studies in Aggadah, Targum and Jewish Liturgy in Memory of Joseph Heinemann'', edited by JJ Petuchowski and E. Fleischer. 32-44. Jerusalem: Magnes Press (1981). * Porton, Gary G. "Ḥanokh Albeck on the Talmudic Sugya." In ''The Formation of the Babylonian Talmud.'' pp. 127–133. Brill, 1970. * Rafeld, Meir. "On the Interpretation of a Purim Sugya in Rabbinic Literature." ''Mentalities'' 14, no. 1 (1999): 1. * Reisner, Avram Israel. "On the origins of the Sugya: Tractate Shevuot of the Babylonian Talmud—Chapter One". The Jewish Theological Seminary of America, 1996. * Zur, Uri. "Chaining as a Structuring Means of the Sugya in the Talmud Bavli." ''Revue des études juives''. 175, no. 3 (2016): 415-423.


References

{{authority control Talmud Aramaic words and phrases Oral Torah