V2nd - chapter 11 - more examples - Bastardized?
alice wellintown
alicewellintown at gmail.com
Sun Nov 28 12:14:04 CST 2010
Is Stencil a detective? He is said to be an adenturer. This is a
parodic description of Henry Adams, who reminds his readers again and
again, that he is not an adventurer and thus his is a story of
Education not Adventure. Of course, like Stencil he imposes his
subjective confessions on to history, or stencilizes them, even as he
manuevers to avoid the limited and ambiguous and unreliable first
person. Stencil is a cery Modern and Romantic hero; his quest is who
he is or one who looks for V.
On Sun, Nov 28, 2010 at 12:22 PM, Ian Livingston
<igrlivingston at gmail.com> wrote:
> Blank parody of Sam Spade. Nothing intended in the parody but a bit of
> a snicker. His role as detective is plain enough, the femme fatale
> clear enough, the vertiginous complication messy enough, but the
> detective is a bit of a wimp, no?
>
> On Sun, Nov 28, 2010 at 9:07 AM, alice wellintown
> <alicewellintown at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> Hence, too, The Maltese Falcon. I do believe we have to include
>>> Hammett in the discussion of Malta and things Maltese. Surely Stencil
>>> is a soft-boiled pastiche of Spade in some ways, yes?
>>
>> Stencil is a Soft-boiled pastiche? Sounds interesting, but I can quite
>> make out your meaning.
>>
>
>
>
> --
> "liber enim librum aperit."
>
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