Pynchons Problem
Bled Welder
bledwelder at hotmail.com
Mon Mar 12 07:38:52 CDT 2012
There are feminist interpretations of Gravity's? Huh! Now I must rreally be missing something.
Feminist, as in, what is a feminist interpretation of a novel, showing how the characters and viewpoints are enlightened about female equality? That's it basically?
Gravity's Rainbow? Gosh that's sad. What's the opposite of feminist? Misogynist? That would be closer. From concept to detail--
This will be fun. What are some like professional essays on the feminism of Gravity's that I might link to?
Date: Mon, 12 Mar 2012 05:14:19 -0700
From: markekohut at yahoo.com
Subject: Re: Pynchons Problem
To: alicewellintown at gmail.com; pynchon-l at waste.org
Alice,
stuff to argue with here but I will choose to say that AtD has P's fullest presenation
of his ideas about women. And womanhood.
And, one can't forget The White Goddess.
From: alice wellintown <alicewellintown at gmail.com>
To: pynchon -l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
Sent: Monday, March 12, 2012 6:26 AM
Subject: Re: Pynchons Problem
In its self-deprecating humorous reflections, the Slow Learner
Introduction admits that Pynchon was, like most American males (so
Pynchon sez), an immature jackass and that his characters were
invested with his chauvinistic attitudes. While I
admire the feminist
readings of GR, the feminism found there belongs to the critics and
not the author. The author turns with VL. And his turn is awkward.
Inherent Vice seems a novel written to appease Pynchon's wife and her
feminist friends. AGtD, however, is a parody of his earlier turn and
takes some revenge on his foolish surrender to the feminists.
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