Prairie vs. Zoyd as Protagonist of Vineland

David Morris fqmorris at gmail.com
Thu Sep 9 07:41:34 CDT 2010


I agree.  Zoyd is yet another of Pynchon's schlemiels, inept, probably
overweight, but lovable.

On Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 5:40 AM, Carvill, John <john.carvill at sap.com> wrote:
> Never really liked the 'Prairie is the protagonist' line. I can see how you can argue that she is, of course, but for me, well, Zoyd is the man. One major factor is that you enter the book through Zoyd's POV (or the narrator's POV of Zoyd), and Zoyd is a hugely appealing character, so despite the fact that he 'drops out' for some segments, he stays with you. For me, Zoyd is the most compelling character in the text, and - with his less focused, less committed political aspect - sort of a Hippy Everyman and, thus, closer to the heart of the book, in a sense.



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