Copellia
malignd at aol.com
malignd at aol.com
Thu Jan 2 16:21:22 CST 2014
Also, recommend Helen Simpson, the reviewer. Getting a Life, is the one I know, stories, which are very good. Particularly like Burns and the Bankers (I think that's right ...).
-----Original Message-----
From: Martha Rooster-Singh <martharoostersingh at gmail.com>
To: pynchon-l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
Sent: Wed, Jan 1, 2014 1:33 pm
Subject: Re: Copellia
Femme fatale
A darkly erotic reworking of Bluebeard's Castle, a bawdy Puss in Boots and a sado-masochistic version of Little Red Riding Hood - Angela Carter's subversive take on traditional fairy stories in The Bloody Chamber is as shocking today as when the collection first appeared in 1979, writes Helen Simpson
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2006/jun/24/classics.angelacarter
On Wed, Jan 1, 2014 at 12:37 PM, Martha Rooster-Singh <martharoostersingh at gmail.com> wrote:
In the great author's latest novel he sends his brave protagonist out to Montauk where, in the middle of protected wildlife sanctuaries, in and around, and even under Camp Hero, Gabriel Ice has a castle under construction. As she makes her way down a confidential space that resists analysis, her antennas, now stiff with the hairspray that Oedipa never put on or took off, are filled with radio traffic, numerals and NATO phonetic letters. More Mondaugen's sferics? The ghosts of murdered Africans? A poetry he can't comprehend. Not literally. Grover with his ham radio? The cries of his robot boy, the Black boy Carl Barrington, constructed from the car parts and junk that the society wastes and piles in the junk yard, the garbage tossed on the lawns to terrorize the childless Black couple, the Jazz man's nightmares and the the desperate schemes of the boys who try to save themselves from the bomb plots and fallout shelters their parents have given them. Here, Maxine is a double fallout shelter. One, the Cold War shelter, now a tourist attraction, MAD in the new frontier, the other, Ice's Castle under construction. Privacy for the billionaire plutocrat welcoming the Void.
page 193
P drops the clue: Bluebeard's Castle. Not a tip of the cap to Kurt Vonnegut here, but an Opera. So the psycho-sexual journey.
The other opera, always connected with this one, has to do with a wooden prince, made of flesh, made wood, then flesh again.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wooden_Prince
On Tue, Dec 31, 2013 at 10:59 PM, John Bailey <sundayjb at gmail.com> wrote:
I'm always interested by how damn often in the human (at least
western) imagination we imagine our creations will rebel against us
eventually. Robots, especially - it's as if we're sure they'll try to
kill us all as soon as they're smart enough to think like us. Really
neurotic of humans to project that onto something that doesn't even
exist yet, I reckon.
Has extra connotations for the US, given that it's a creation that did
(successfully) rebel against its creator.
On Wed, Jan 1, 2014 at 2:55 PM, David Morris <fqmorris at gmail.com> wrote:
> I guess the most important aspect of all of this neo-human engineering is
> that deus ex machina. Even so benign a being as Slothrup might cost you your
> balls. The Creation often confounds The Creator, but only because of the
> Creator's willfulness. This is also the story of Faust: willful self
> creation via artificial means. Both the same cautionary tale.
>
> David Morris
>
>
>
>
> On Tuesday, December 31, 2013, David Morris wrote:
>>
>> P knows his Freud, and he knows opera. He is well versed in automata and
>> Frankenstein, as well as the golem, He hasn't done clones yet...
>>
>> Clone Returns Home (2008)
>>
>> http://variety.com/2008/film/reviews/the-clone-returns-home-2-1200472620/
>>
>> Trailer:
>> HKAIFF 2009 - 複製人懷鄉曲 The Clone Returns Home - trailer
>>
>>
>> On Tuesday, December 31, 2013, John Bailey wrote:
>>>
>>> Yeah, Coppelia is based on ETA Hoffmann's short story The Sandman,
>>> which was the major text Freud used to explore his theory of The
>>> Uncanny (and good stuff on voyeurism and castration). Very influential
>>> story and essay. Dunno if P read either but I've never been able to
>>> read V. without seeing them everywhere in the novel. V is the human
>>> who transforms themselves into an object, and makes real the horror
>>> implicit in the ballet (it's more obvious in the story, which doesn't
>>> have a happy ending.)
>>>
>>> On Wed, Jan 1, 2014 at 9:12 AM, David Morris <fqmorris at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> > Watching the movie Tetro, a scene from the ballet Copellia, the broken
>>> > doll,
>>> > is portrayed. I'd never heard anyone mention the ballet in V. In light
>>> > of
>>> > Copellia, which seems so obvious to be its reference.
>>> >
>>> > http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copp%C3%A9lia
>>> >
>>> > Coppélia concerns an inventor, Dr Coppelius, who has made a life-size
>>> > dancing doll. It is so lifelike that Franz, a village swain, becomes
>>> > infatuated with it and sets aside his true heart's desire, Swanhilde.
>>> > She
>>> > shows him his folly by dressing as the doll, pretending to make it come
>>> > to
>>> > life and ultimately saving him from an untimely end at the hands of the
>>> > inventor.
-
Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
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