Safe Sex is No Fun

Paul Mackin mackin at allware.com
Thu Mar 21 21:20:11 CST 1996


Adam:

My characterization of the thematic requirements of GR for so much
sex was incomplete. It was more than the rocket, as you say.

Are you also saying that all the perversity is explained by thematic
requirements alone?

If sex controls men, what controls women?

Love?

					P.



On Thu, 21 Mar 1996, Adam Lou Stephanides wrote:

> 
> 
> On Thu, 21 Mar 1996, Paul Mackin wrote:
> 
> > 
> > 
> > On Wed, 20 Mar 1996, RICHARD ROMEO wrote: (speaking of Infinite Jest)
> > 
> > > It's also  
> > > missing the sex preoccupations in Pynchon's works. (for the good IMHO)   
> > 
> > How is one to read this difference? There are of course obviously
> > different thematic requirements. A story about a sex-sniffing rocket
> > needs a whole lot of sex to sniff out. Whereas too much sex in a book
> 
> But only one of the sexual encounters which are followed by the V-2
> (if that is indeed the case) is actually shown; most of the sex in
> the book takes place outside London or involves other people.  Nor
> does this account for the "perverse" nature of much of the sex.
> I could be wrong, but I don't think there's a single sex scene or
> sexual relationship in the book which isn't linked in some way to
> violence or SM, even if only metaphorically.
> 
> My feeling is that the prevalence of sex scenes in the book reflects
> the theme that sex is one way in which They control you (e. g. Pirate
> jerking off to make the message visible, Pointsman's use of Katje to
> control Pudding, and of course Slothrop's conditioning), at least if
> you're a guy--sex doesn't seem to play this role for women in GR.
> 
> --Adam
> 




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