GR translation: demolition man

Monte Davis montedavis at verizon.net
Thu Nov 8 03:34:44 CST 2012


Yes, surely. And it's not a long step from "high and low" here  to "as
above, so below" in M&D. 

-----Original Message-----
From: jochen stremmel [mailto:jstremmel at gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2012 2:03 AM
To: Monte Davis
Cc: Mike Jing; Pynchon Mailing List
Subject: Re: GR translation: demolition man

I think what Pynchon refers to here is more general, not only in the context
of WW II or the high and low contact. It's about "a repetition high and
low", low like the malignant pun a filthy, mocking scoundrel might make and
high like a sympathetic magic.


It's about playing with words and images, similes, metaphors. Like the
demolition man and the Trembler he sees in a spoon between a glass and a
plate, if he has to do the dishes.

2012/11/7 Monte Davis <montedavis at verizon.net>:
> Jochen is correct about "demolition man" in  general, but in a WWII 
> context I think it means Explosive Ordnance Disposal,  someone who
*disarms* bombs.
> A "trembler" is a vibration-sensitive switch, its central tongue (an 
> electrical contact) closing the circuit if it touches either the "high"
> contact above or the "low" contact beneath.
>
>
>
> From: owner-pynchon-l at waste.org [mailto:owner-pynchon-l at waste.org] On 
> Behalf Of Mike Jing
> Sent: Wednesday, November 07, 2012 2:22 AM
> To: Pynchon Mailing List
> Subject: GR translation: demolition man
>
>
>
> P234.35-235.4  In the second antechamber is an empty red tin that held 
> coffee. The brand name is Savarin. He understands that it means to say 
> "Severin." Oh, the filthy, the mocking scoundrel. . . . But these are 
> not malignant puns against an intended sufferer so much as a 
> sympathetic magic, a repetition high and low of some prevailing form 
> (as, for instance, no sane demolition man at his evening dishwater 
> will wash a spoon between two cups, or even between a glass and a plate,
for fear of the Trembler it implies . .
> . because it's a trembler-tongue he really holds, poised between its 
> two fatal contacts, in fingers aching with having been so suddenly
reminded). .
> . .
>
> What is the "demolition man" mentioned here?  Why the fear of tremblers?
> What is a trembler anyway?
>
> Also, what is the meaning of "high and low" in "a repetition high and
low"?




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