IVIV (1) There Will be Computers for This

rich richard.romeo at gmail.com
Wed Sep 16 15:27:42 CDT 2009


"There is simply too much of the 21st century here to see this as
merely a critique of the LA (or the America) of the 60s and what it
led to.
_______________
if it is, its obviously rendered, well I'll drop a mention of the
beginnings of the internet...personally I believe this is a fairly
straightforward novel about a place in time and not some critique on
the present like GR was.

  For there is a strange suggestion that 'perhaps' it all went
in the right direction: 'Someday. . . there’d be phones as standard
equipment in every car, maybe even dashboard computers.  People could
exchange names and addresses and life stories and form alumni
associations to gather once a year at some bar off a different freeway
exit each time, to remember the night they set up a temporary commune
to help each other home through the fog.'  In other words, Pynchon
seems to be suggesting that if what we’ve gained from history is the
ability to discern ourselves within a community of people, even if it
be of the Facebook type, and if this is all we have of the past, of
the perverted promise of it, then so be it.".
_____________
it went in the right direction?  yeah, the Reagan, Christer, Ayn Rand
free market direction

rich


On 9/16/09, Dave Monroe <against.the.dave at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 16, 2009 at 2:37 PM, David Morris <fqmorris at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> It's been said before, but, rilly, what is the point of this
>> "prophesy?"  REET senses the future, and it's computers?
>
> Well, on the one hand, a note from my Ch. 1 hosting stint that I
> apparently didn't send @ the time.  And on the other, e.g., ...
>
> "There is simply too much of the 21st century here to see this as
> merely a critique of the LA (or the America) of the 60s and what it
> led to.  For there is a strange suggestion that 'perhaps' it all went
> in the right direction: 'Someday. . . there’d be phones as standard
> equipment in every car, maybe even dashboard computers.  People could
> exchange names and addresses and life stories and form alumni
> associations to gather once a year at some bar off a different freeway
> exit each time, to remember the night they set up a temporary commune
> to help each other home through the fog.'  In other words, Pynchon
> seems to be suggesting that if what we’ve gained from history is the
> ability to discern ourselves within a community of people, even if it
> be of the Facebook type, and if this is all we have of the past, of
> the perverted promise of it, then so be it.".
>
> http://hotmetalbridge.org/?p=906
>
>




More information about the Pynchon-l mailing list