Vineland and the Death of the 60s
Mark Kohut
mark.kohut at gmail.com
Fri Jul 3 06:49:44 CDT 2015
I believe Pynchon married Ma. Jackson the year VINELAND was published.
I think Pynchon's vision of the kind of film that is in VINELAND shapes the meaning. among other things.
Sent from my iPad
> On Jul 3, 2015, at 12:15 AM, gary webb <gwebb8686 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I've sort of been stuck on what has been so called Pynchon's California novels... in particular I've been re-reading Vineland... the whole Frenesi, 24fps, Brock Vond, death of Weed Atman, and the collapse of PR3... Pynchon is writing about a sort of failed revolution or maybe not even revolution, and it is interesting that he is using the medium of film to document it all, to be followed circa 1984 with the ubiquitous Tube... I didn't really give the death of Weed Atman much thought in my first reading of the novel, but it is really pretty strong writing, after reading Bleeding Edge and Inherent Vice... Gravity's Rainbow, even though it is set in WWII, still reads like someone coming to grips with the fallout of what was going on during the 1960s, the is a sense of Paradise Lost about the whole book... Vineland is written by someone who never really forgot the promise that was floated so liberally, someone who had come out of hiding, to tell us where we've been and why, even though I think Pynchon was more or less acclimating himself, married and child, settled down for all practical purposes, but I still plugged into that moment, maybe a little more cynical, older, wiser, etc. This is just my interpretation... Gravity's Rainbow is a big novel, and there are many threads of meaning... but somehow in my mind, Gravity's Rainbow and Vineland have some sort of strange link, not necessarily in content or publication chronology, but maybe one is an Inferno of sorts and the other is a sort of Paradise, where in Vineland one gets a sense that the demons that plagued Pynchon earlier in his career, had somehow been exorcised and reconciled with, during a 17 year silence...
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