NP Best Wishes/Catching Up
David Morris
fqmorris at gmail.com
Wed Nov 8 14:36:26 CST 2006
I think P intends to send the message that Bianca has been corrupted,
that she's not innocent, pure or even young in the normal sense of the
word. Still Slothrop sins when he makes love to her. He falls for
her depraved act, and later, when he finds her hanging, he has his
face pushed down into his own shit, and he repents.
As for Franz, his whole story is one of coming to grips with his own depravity.
David Morris
On 11/8/06, Paul Mackin <paul.mackin at verizon.net> wrote:
>
> On Nov 7, 2006, at 4:28 PM, Carvill John wrote:
>
> > Wonder why the discussion about Slothrop & Bianca never got off the
> > ground? I know there has been discussion on that subject before,
> > and there is that article explaining that BIanca is (maybe) not as
> > young as she seems, but to me the key question is - why does
> > Pynchon put that stuff in his books? Why have a scene like that
> > between Slothrop and Bianca, or the imagined incest on the boat
> > between Franz and what may or may not be his daughter?
> >
> The most obvious answer would be that the passages are allegorical.
> It would be very boring to expend a lot of verbiage describing how
> nations of Europe have continued to trick, lie to, and pillage each
> other, but a steamy scene of unlawful sexual temptation, desire and
> ravishment may implant the idea at a subconscious level..
>
>
>
>
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