V-2nd C4 The Search for Bridey Murphy
kelber at mindspring.com
kelber at mindspring.com
Fri Jul 30 14:21:22 CDT 2010
"... he waved [a dark-colored lump of gristle] triumphantly before Esther. 'Twenty-two years of social unhappiness, nicht wahr? End of act one.'"
As businessman and amateur hypnotist Morey Bernstein cut through layers of Virginia Tighe's consciousness to reveal her inner Irishwoman, so Schoenmaker cuts through layers of Esther's nose to reveal her inner Irishwoman, as he gives her the perfect little turned up Irish nose.
He's not only relieving her of 22 years of personal unhappiness, he's cutting away thousands of years of ethnic oppression - removing that which identifies her as Jewish. The German phrase he tosses in (he's an American, apparently)is a pretty pointed reference to you know what. "End of act one" = Final Solution.
Laura
-----Original Message-----
>From: Dave Monroe <against.the.dave at gmail.com>
>
>"Next evening, prim and nervous-thighed in a rear seat of the
>crosstown bus, Esther divided her attention between the delinquent
>wilderness outside and a paperback copy of The Search for Bridey
>Murphy." (V., Ch 4, p. 97)
>
and:
>The Search for Bridey Murphy
>
>The Press: Yes, Virginia, There Is a Bridey
>Monday, Jun. 18, 1956
>
>http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,862245,00.html
>
>In 1952, Colorado businessman and amateur hypnotist Morey Bernstein
>put housewife Virginia Tighe of Pueblo, Colorado in a trance that
>sparked off startling revelations about Tighe's alleged past life as a
>19th-century Irishwoman and her rebirth in the United States 59 years
>later. Bernstein used a technique called hypnotic regression, during
>which the subject is gradually taken back to childhood. He then
>attempted to take Virginia one step further, before birth, and
>suddenly was astonished to find he was listening to Bridey Murphy.
>
>[...]
>
>... Most scientists today are satisfied that everything Virginia Tighe
>said can be explained as a memory of her long-forgotten childhood.
>
>The Search for Bridey Murphy was also made into a 1956 movie starring
>Teresa Wright as Ruth Simmons....
>
>[...]
>
>In Thomas Pynchon's V. (1963), a character called Esther is reading
>The Search for Bridey Murphy as she is sitting on a bus. This occurs
>in the fourth chapter of the novel, "In which Esther gets a nose job".
>
>[...]
>
>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridey_Murphy
>
>Bridey Murphy
>
>http://skepdic.com/bridey.html
>
>http://www.survivalafterdeath.org.uk/books/ducasse/critical/25.htm
>
>http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/522/is-it-possible-to-recall-past-lives-through-hypnosis
>
>The Search for Bridey Murphy (1956)
>
>http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0049729/
>
>
>"life after death.... metempsychosis ... and the rest of a weird canon
>of twentieth-century metaphysics we've come now to associate with the
>city of Los Angeles and similar regions"
>
>Not to mention with Thomas Pynchon ...
More information about the Pynchon-l
mailing list