pynchon-l-digest V2 #7335
Carvill, John
john.carvill at sap.com
Fri Dec 11 04:11:28 CST 2009
> Cherrycoke is another unreliable narrator.
Oh, ok then!
Isn't it even harder than usual to deal with a term like 'unreliable narrator', when who or what is the 'narrator' is in itself pretty hard to pin down? Who, for instance, is the narrator of Conrad's 'Heart of Darkness'? With Pynchon - as pointed out by John Bailey - it's often very hard to say, and there is often a 'kaleidoscopic' narrator. In IV, there's what appears to be (or what cal be taken as) a little narratorial blip right at the start, as we watch Shasta come up the steps, as if from an omniscient point of view, before snapping into a sort of 'Doc's point of view' for much of the remainder of the book. However we dice the general term 'unreliable narrator', I don't think it fits Doc, not just because he is not literally the narrator. The idea that his dope smoking might make him unreliable is an interesting one, but ultimately I don't think that really fits either - even leaving aside the question of how stoned he is most of the time.
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