Thank you for your kindness...<br><br>A tableau need not be without message or purpose, but I find P less didactic than perhaps benignly pedagogic (take that, hun! - nah, there are enough latin cognates that you probably didn't hesitate)......Though I don't mean to suggest that my survey is exhaustive, I think as a rule, narrative toward resolution is usually for the purpose of illustrating moral, or axiomatic lessons - and, this should piss some people of - it is largely the province of "lesser" authors. It is a comforting structural device.......
<br><br>But Pynchon labors, not resolution, but refraction, and dissipation (or entropy), again, because "life" doesn't oblige the former. Without intending to provoke ire, I continue to hold that he borrows this from, among others, Borges, and Oakley Hall. Of the half dozen or so of the latter's books I've read (he has become my favorite literary "guilty pleasure") the disparate narrative threads don't tend to "resolve", and one is left with a sense of despair when done. There is an hostile indifference to a reader's demand for "closure".
<br><br>But that is not meant to imply that there is no "message", just that it is not revealed in the "factual" historical perspective, but rather at the micro level of the various interpersonal relationships.....In spite of the sense of hopelessness evident on the surface, I am certain that both Hall and P are "hopeful romantics" - there is, amidst all the exploitation, a sense that the game really is worth the candle.
<br><br>I noted a brief speech by one of the minor characters in AtD which seemed to distill this idea, but I am having trouble locating it. I'll keep working.<br><br><br>and, if I never told you - I greatly admire the enthusiasm with which you Germans listers go at TRPs work. I cannot imagine how hard you labor for your prize. His language, idioms, allusions are not "native" to you. I have long since forgiven you for the arrogance of the young German with whom I spoke nearly 20 years ago, who insisted we have "no culture". We do, and you show it the highest regard......Thanks kids, take a collective bow....
<br><br><br>love,<br>cfa<br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 1/20/07, <b class="gmail_sendername">Thomas Eckhardt</b> <<a href="mailto:thomas.eckhardt@uni-bonn.de">thomas.eckhardt@uni-bonn.de</a>> wrote:</span>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">Great post, Charles, thanks. I don't believe, though, that P's novels<br>are merely tableaus of stories. There is always something more, some
<br>"unifying theme" perhaps, or in terms of plot, usually a quest of some<br>kind or other.<br><br>Yes, it is a very delightful read.<br><br>Thomas<br><br></blockquote></div><br>