Tracking the ever-elusive Great American Novel

Henry Musikar hmusikar at speakeasy.net
Fri May 19 21:22:29 CDT 2006


I once heard Morrison on the radio, where she said that the Venus de Milo
was a misogynist work because its amputation/disfigurement of a woman image,
leaving only the sexualized torso.  She didn't sound high, so she's just one
of many made ignorant and less intelligent by their, however earned, anger.

Henry M

How good bad music and bad reasons sound when we march against an enemy --
Nietzsche.  So...
For most eclectic music on the WWW and a list of my favorite 50 movies,
check out my media page:
http://www.urdomain.us/scuffling.htmhttp://members.dsli.com/cyberia/scufflin
g.htm 

Get high quality DSL and VOIP from Speakeasy:
http://www.speakeasy.net/refer/192887 

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-pynchon-l at waste.org [mailto:owner-pynchon-l at waste.org] On Behalf
Of jd
Sent: Friday, May 19, 2006 4:31 PM
To: Ghetta Life
Cc: alex.gordon at abbeyroad.com; pynchon-l at waste.org
Subject: Re: Tracking the ever-elusive Great American Novel

I can't speak for Beloved but I read Jazz and The Bluest Eye and
neither impressed me.  Also, I saw an interview where Morrison was
spouting about white people, how we tipped busses with black kids in
it, etc. and it kind of bugged me that this powerful African American
voice was generalizing white people in such a manner.  I certainly
never tipped a bus and think whoever would or did is an asshat, and
yet in her statements she lumped me as a white person in with those
people.  It's like saying straight people kill homosexuals.  OK, some
straight people do, but I as a straight person think it's horrendous
to do so, and I think it's pathetic that we in a "free" society are
making it illegal for them to marry, etc. and I think it's a shame
when people who have faced hate and generalization react by making
generalizations of their own.






More information about the Pynchon-l mailing list