Pynchon & Politics( Lacey essay)
Joseph Tracy
brook7 at sover.net
Wed Jan 30 00:29:18 CST 2013
I was simply trying to agree with you on this point. That he should have read enough to know that there were others who wrote about P's politics. As to "political theorists"- that, Lacey says, is who Pynchon has failed to attract the "serious " attention of.
"Pynchon has failed to attract any serious attention from political theorists," .
So in a court of law you would have to prove that there were other 'political theorists' who paid 'serious attention '. Something like that. I guess in that situation Lacey would probably lose, and I suppose the world would be a better place for it.
On Jan 30, 2013, at 12:11 AM, alice wellintown wrote:
> Lacey did his homework. I don't know what you are saying here about political theorists.
>
>
>
> On Tuesday, January 29, 2013, Joseph Tracy wrote:
> Yea, he really should have done his homework. A lot hinges on the word serious. I think every writer who is not a pure propagandist or jokester is serious, and even a fair percentage of jokesters, but who exactly qualifies as a "political theorist"?
> On Jan 29, 2013, at 7:21 PM, alice wellintown wrote:
>
> >>> 1) I didn't get the impression that Lacey was saying he was the first to
> >>> look at Pynchon politics, only that the bulk of criticism is literary, and
> >>> some political writing was, according to him, over-concerned with
> >>> conspiracy/paranoia. A bit too nit-picky to interest me, though I agree
> >>> that there are other political Pynchon essays.
> >
> > There are dozens of essays, journals, articles, and several full
> > length studies, dissertations, and books dedicated to Pynchon's
> > politics. There is, as mentioned, a Law Journal that takes up Pynchon
> > and the Law. Lacey states:
> > Scholarship on Pynchon’s work has grown into a cottage industry,
> > especially in literary studies. But, up to this point, Pynchon has
> > failed to attract any serious attention from political theorists, even
> > though he is arguably the most important novelist writing in English
> > today about the organization of power in the postmodern world. On the
> > one hand, the unwillingness of political theorists to tackle Pynchon
> > is understandable.
> >
> >
> > This is how he begins. Again, claiming that one's article or essay or
> > book is fresh and original, opens new avenues, explores ignored
> > terrain, is a fairly common way to proceed. But here the claim is
> > made not five years after publication, or ten, or even twenty, but 30
> > plus years. Moreover, the claim is made after the cottage industry
> > had Vineland and M&D, SL Introduction, and several other essays that
> > expose the Political Pynchon, then two more novels. After VL the
> > cottage industry exploded with political readings. And, of course,
> > there were those who maintained that Pynchon was writing political
> > sature from the start.
> >
> > So, again, not a key point, but there it is. One wonders how Lacey
> > managed to miss all those other studeis of Pynchon's politics.
>
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