Outtakes from Against the Day
alice malice
alicewmalice at gmail.com
Mon Apr 28 05:30:39 CDT 2014
One day soon, I hope, some sharp student of American Literature will
shine light on Pynchon's debt to the great American Romance, and on
the influence of Hawthorne. I mean, think about it...a future novelist
interested in his puritan roots picks up this old classic, not Scarlet
Letter but The House of the Seven Gables, only to discover that the
novel is about the Pyncheon family, the spelling, like the spelling of
Hawthorn, add an e, remove an e...has been altered to
protect/dispute...and that the two families have a history. That
history, made romance, involves one King Ahab who covets his poor
neighbors land, accuses his neighbor of sin, executes him under the
law and takes his property, the house he builds on it, not quite
America, is dark, incestuous, and haunted, falling into the
reflection of itself, like Usher's, into the morass, where the ghosts
of murdered peoples haunts the land. Bu the House is an old Gothic
standard, so the Street and the Train and the Photograph...the use of
time and light, technologies as they press on the Puritan
typologies...and so on...and the social commentary from a
context--distance, a fabled history romanced...
In Romance, science is, at the very least, a limited and limiting
light. Nature, though scatterbrained, and secular, is Queen of Hearts
and Minds, and of all that stirs under the sun.
On Sun, Apr 27, 2014 at 7:13 PM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
> And, did not Lew's grace epiphany---in which he accepted things as they
> were, happen with an explosion---which he,
> magic-realism-like--survived---with grace?
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> On Apr 27, 2014, at 3:24 PM, Monte Davis <montedavis49 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I was thinking primarily of the thematic axis of light and time, the book's
> most central and sustained. (Heck, I bet you could even find it in the
> title!) Pynchon has been reminding us since Merle's introduction to
> photography that as the century turned the process of capturing images was
> getting rapidly faster and less cumbersome than it had been for Daguerre,
> Matthew Brady, Brady & co: e.g. the advent of the Kodak "Brownie" on p. 72
> and the use of the then-new term "snapshot" (e.g. 277). That difference made
> a difference in the magic of "stopping time": here he notes explicitly that
> the subjects eyes' would once have looked odd because of an exposure of some
> minutes, but now because of... something else.
>
> In the first photo, the drovers are making a joke of something that's deadly
> earnest for Webb and the anarchists. (Lew's recreational consumption of
> Cyclomite is a joke at another angle). In the second, I suspect, Deuce and
> Sloat are frozen on their way out of history: the former to hell on earth
> with Lake, the latter to Frank's bullet.
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sun, Apr 27, 2014 at 1:00 PM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> As Markie on the plist is always sayin' , the book contains everything.
>>
>> Now, rereading this post, why do we think TRP wrote of/juxtaposed these
>> two pictures ?
>>
>> One of eating fireworks,and, a "little clearer", the two " killers" caught
>> as rigid as in an August Sander photo of two burghers.
>>
>> Sent from my iPad
>>
>> On Apr 27, 2014, at 10:59 AM, Monte Davis <montedavis49 at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>> http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/photobooth/2014/04/the-view-from-a-pinhole.html#slide_ss_0=1
>>
>> p. 300, one of many quiet Big Bangs knotting explosions,light and time:
>>
>> From a drawer in a cabinet against the wall, Merle took more
>> gelatin-silver prints. “Maybe these’ll be some help.” One showed a pair of
>> what looked like drovers in town for the Fourth of July, one of them
>> appearing to force the other to eat a giant firecracker, all lit and
>> throwing bright sparks, flying, dying, filling the unmeasurable fragment of
>> time the shutter was open, to the amusement of others in the background
>> looking on from the porch of a saloon.
>>
>> “You’re not telling me—”
>>
>> “Here, this one’s a little clearer.”
>>
>> It was out in front of this exact same amalgamator’s office. This time
>> Deuce and Sloat were not smiling, and the light was more proper to autumn,
>> you could see dark clouds in the sky overhead, and nothing was casting
>> shadows. The two men were posed as if for some ceremonial purpose. For the
>> gray day, the exposure was a little longer, and you’d expect one at least to
>> have moved and blurred the image, but no, they had stood rigid, almost
>> defiant, allowing the collodion mixture its due measure of light, to record
>> the two killers with unrelenting fidelity, as if set in front of some slow
>> emulsion of an earlier day, eyes, Frank, bending close, noticed now,
>> rendered with that same curious crazed radiance which once was an artifact
>> of having to blink a couple of hundred times during the exposure, but in
>> this more modern form due to something authentically ghostly, for which
>> these emulsions were acting as agents, revealing what no other record up
>> till then could’ve.
>
>
-
Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list=pynchon-l
More information about the Pynchon-l
mailing list