ATDTDA (33) - p. 942 chick lit?
Paul Mackin
paul.mackin at verizon.net
Thu May 29 10:37:12 CDT 2008
Michael Bailey wrote:
> Laura wrote:
>
>> p. 942: "It was her old need for some kind of transcendence ..."
>>
>> Where's the multi-layered, enigmatic TRP in this paragraph? This explicit rendering of what's going on in Yashmeen's mind seems to be more in the realm of "chick lit." An homage? Or is Pynchon just off his game here?
>>
>>
>
> the dismissive tone brings to mind Neville & Nigel,
> when we first meet her -
> "Oh it's only old Yashmeen"
>
> Might I suggest that Yashmeen, like so many of us, despite
> a vision (the roulette system) that provides her and Reef and Cyprian
> the means of living well, is here dismissing the visionary or transcendent.
>
> There is both tragedy and comedy in this book, and I think
> one of the biggest tragedies is Yashmeen (and Kit) abandoning
> their pursuit of math. Not that I blame them...
>
>
If it were the pursuit of math as math, that would be one thing.
But Yashmeen's pursuit of math-as-transcendence is another thing
entirely isn't it?
Isn't math for Yashmeen just one more Pynchonian madness, obsession,
paranoia, desire to control?
Not that there is anything wrong with control.
Control in pursuit of schools not falling down (Kit's kind and what
China lacked) is good.
Control in pursuit of universal world justice is madness.
I'm laying in on Yashmeen a little thick, I know.
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