the Merle center
Heikki Raudaskoski
hraudask at sun3.oulu.fi
Tue Feb 28 17:33:43 CST 2012
AtD didn't work for me much either. But I really love "One Hundred
Years of Solitude" which is a tapestry of characters, not one of whom
arguably is the central character. Perhaps the protagonist is the
BuendÃa family, or the village of Macondo; the multitude of this
character doesn't prevent it from being quite solitary, as we know...
This begs the question: am I being patronizing here? More prone to
accept the lack of one or two individual protagonists when the
narrative takes place in an organic (however ironically OHYoS deals
with this organicity) and archaic/premodern (well, initially at least)
third-world realm?
Heikki
Lainaus Paul Mackin <mackin.paul at verizon.net>:
> On 2/28/2012 10:16 AM, kelber at mindspring.com wrote:
>> I've harped on this too many times before, but the reason ATD falls
>> short (for me) is that there's no protagonist. It's not that a
>> protagonist provides a "moral" center, so much as a point of reference.
>> Slothrop isn't the first person we meet in GR, and he leaves early, but
>> his journey is our journey. Oedipa and Doc Sportello have conventional
>> protagonist roles, which is why COL49 and IV are probably the most
>> accessible of Pynchon's books (I love the first, dislike the second). V.
>> and M&D both have dual protagonists, which is better than no
>> protagonist. Only ATD stands out as having none. I can understand why he
>> did it - it's a reflection of the time it takes place, when quantum
>> theory is upending Newtonian physics, Europe is fragmenting, etc. The
>> center no longer holds. But it's hard to read a book that has no central
>> character. We have no place in it. I really do think that's what
>> Pynchon's driving at - he wants us to feel as dislocated in time and
>> space as his multitude of characters do. But I just didn't want to spend
>> that much time not caring. I prefer to join Slothrop or Oedipa in their
>> paranoid journeys, than to be jostled around like a random gas molecule
>> for 1000+ pages.
>>
>
> I have to agree with Laura on this. I can identify with Slothrup more
> than I can with any of the main characters of AtD.
>
> That kind of connection to a novel is necessary for me. I read AtD at
> least twice (long ago) and the writing in many places is about as good
> as it gets. But it's not a satisfying story because I never cared what
> happened.
>
> P
>> Laura
More information about the Pynchon-l
mailing list