GR P1 S1: "The Evacuation still proceeds..."
John Doe
tristero69 at yahoo.com
Thu Oct 27 19:20:56 CDT 2005
Now THIS is a well-put characterization of Pynchon's
style! Seriously!..and...notice the compelling absence
of useless trendy Critty jargon...very cool...an
aspect of Pynchon's technique is well dscribed, we can
grasp the meaning clearly...and not ONCE did we have
to hear "Logocentric"..."episteme"...or "Lacanian"...
this is a good e-mail...
--- David Casseres <david.casseres at gmail.com> wrote:
> Anything goes, yes. Our Man's writing is full of
> connections and
> implications that don't really stand up to careful
> analysis, but they
> are there nonetheless. I don't believe for a moment
> that Pynchon
> would write a word like Evacuation, directly
> referring to movement of
> people out of a place, without it crossing his mind
> that it could also
> refer to an emptying of the bowels. Pynchon smiles
> briefly and moves
> on, through the shifting and evanescent layers. Is
> there a Crystal
> Palace? Yes. Is there a Crystal Night? Yes. Are
> there still other
> connotations to the word crystal, and will they
> appear as direct
> meanings elsewhere in the book? Oh hell yes.
>
> Everything about the writing encourages us to tune
> in to these, to
> bark up every tree in the forest. We are to notice
> all these linkages
> to the extent of our level of alertness, and be
> affected by them, even
> to the length of being driven crazy, as I am by a
> certain inescapable
> yet utterly incongruous association found in the
> last few lines of GR.
> It might be the wrong tree but it's a real tree.
>
> On 10/26/05, Paul Mackin <paul.mackin at verizon.net>
> wrote:
> >
> >
> > On Oct 26, 2005, at 5:12 AM, John Carvill wrote:
> > rainbows, etc.
> >
> > Another: the question of how many alternative
> meanings to ascribe to
> > 'evacuation'. *Is* it Pynchon's intention to load
> that word with multiple
> > meanings here? How can we ever know this? It
> didn't occur to me personally
> > to think of evacuation in the bowel-emptying
> sense, but as soon as it was
> > mentioned I couldn't help thinking of the piece of
> 'theatre' surrounding
> > Katje's evacuation of her bowels for Pudding's
> dinner.
> >
> > In Pynchon, anything goes.
> >
> > Of course the word itself has both positive and
> negative connotations. There
> > were the London evacuations of children, mothers
> with small children, the
> > elderly and infirm to the relative safety of the
> countryside But
> > "evacuation'" (German equivalent) was also used in
> the Wannsee
> > protocol--evacuation of the Jews to the East. The
> events in Pirate's dream
> > are purely negative --no one is saved--and not
> directly related to a
> > specific historic event, though the place seems to
> be wartime London.
> > Rather this dreamt of evacuation is a sweeping
> transport of the literary
> > entity which will became well known in later pages
> of the book as the
> > Preterite to their doom and damnation.
> >
> > I have no doubt that readers back in '73 couldn't
> help but think of the of
> > the Jews. At the same time it must be noted that
> historically those charged
> > with obtaining an Allied military victory--as
> represented by Prirate and
> > his employer--would not and could not have had the
> plight of Jews, even if
> > it had been more fully understood, on the front
> burner of their
> > consciousness. If Pirate in fact was channelling
> the situation East, it
> > would have been an extracurricular activity. not
> one sanctioned by the Firm.
> >
> >
>
>
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