WWII in GR
Mark Wright AIA
mwaia at yahoo.com
Mon Aug 7 08:35:05 CDT 2000
Howdy
--- Doug Millison <millison at online-journalist.com> wrote:
> Dave wonders how this whole thread started. I'd date it to the
> beginning of GRGR, when I suggested that the "Ss" in "cast-iron
> pulleys whose spokes are shaped like Ss" might be read as an
> allusion to the Nazi SS, and that it might be possible to read the
> opening of GR as an allusion to the death trains on their way to the
> concentration camps -- rj ridiculed that suggestion and went on to
> talk about the absence of the Holocaust from GR. As RJ has so
> consistently tried to minimize this aspect of the novel if not erase
> it from consideration altogether, I've made it a point to lift this
> material up for consideration.
And *I* would like to highlight the sensitivity of my own symbolical
dowsing rod by reminding one and all of my perspicacity in pointing out
back then that not only are the "Ss" in the pulley an unmistakable SS
reference (nods to Doug), their circumscription by the "O" of the
pulley makes the entire image also a reference to the OSS (Office of
Strategic Services) which figures later in the text. The density of
meaning in those details which seem least significant makes this
passage a spendid 'scription of Freudian dreamwork. This density of
meaning also characterizes the work as a whole. Perhaps the way the
Holocaust comes sloping in and out of view, through as sort of textual
reflection and refraction, indicates that P felt that the Holocaust is
such an enormity that if it were confronted more directly it would
trump the moral complexities he intends to demonstrate? A light touch
on the Holocaust allows him to illuminate the "Racketenstadt" within
which we all live, and allows us to see WWII as somehting more than an
Us (Good) vs Them (Evil) structure?
Mark (Murk)
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