M&D - Chapter 19 - going after Cronos?
Jerome Park
jeromepark3141 at gmail.com
Tue Mar 31 10:18:57 CDT 2015
If the rebel states were named after JD, and not a bank note or Mr Dixy of
Manhattan, he might, on first considering it, think it good, as the
Southerners were rebels, but his antipathy to slavery would certainly cause
him to give it a second thought. Then again, his given name, Jeremiah, the
weeping prophet, author of Lamentations, seems a name better suited to his
partner. Of course, Jeremiah "spiritualized and individualized religion
and insisted upon the primacy of the individual's relationship with God",
so, as Quaker, the name is fitting.
On Tue, Mar 31, 2015 at 11:03 AM, David Ewers <dsewers at comcast.net> wrote:
> Not to mention all the Dixie stuff. I wonder what Dixon would have
> thought of his mutated name being a (possible) synonym for the Confederacy.
>
> On Mar 31, 2015, at 1:11 AM have a nice day, violet wrote this message:),
> Elisabeth Romberg wrote:
>
> Funnily (or not) Mason&Dixon’s names *in themselves *are also now «on the
> market, part of the economy», been colonized, given their names to «a range
> of hot sauces, a semi-pro baseball league, a radio station (…) a chapter of
> the American Rhododendron Society» and so on.
>
> Samuel Thomas, Pynchon and the Political, p. 20
>
> 30. mar. 2015 kl. 21.48 skrev David Ewers <dsewers at comcast.net>:
>
> This is kind of what I was trying to get at with the Linear (watches and
> calendars) vs. Circular (shamanistic...) time. Maybe I'm being too obvious
> here, but what if time is spherical, and clocks, etc. are an attempt at
> drawing a straight line 'on' that sphere? As land surveying methods of the
> M-&D- period make use of triangulation in order to account for the
> curvature of the earth (in order to accurately delineate...), and
> triangulation requires Two Points as well as the unknown, couldn't the
> eleven days be seen as a triangulation device for time? The Open Pampas of
> time being surveyed, soon to be colonized, subdivided, etc.?
>
> Any thoughts on this?
>
> On Mar 30, 2015, at 11:38 AM have a nice day, violet wrote this message:),
> Elisabeth Romberg wrote:
>
> I don’t know if I agree, in this context.
> The battlefield in the Earth’s three dimensions is everything to do with
> Space, and in this book: The Line, isn’t it. Like that passage about the
> longing back for the open Pampas. The West. «Space - the final frontier»,
> even parallel universes now with Cern cranking up again. Ideas like this.
> That people died for.
> Whilst the battlefield in Time would be fought with watches and calendars
> against Magical, shamanistic time sort of thing. Dreamtime.
>
>
>
> Whilst the
>
> 29. mar. 2015 kl. 21.05 skrev David Morris <fqmorris at gmail.com>:
>
> Space vs Time, not Good vs Evil.
>
> On Sunday, March 29, 2015, Elisabeth Romberg <eromberg at mac.com> wrote:
>
>> Rev’d, after telling the Landlord to serve Mason a pint, goes on to say:
>>
>> «(…) the Battle-fields we know, situated in Earth’s three Dimensions,
>> have also their counterparts in Time.»
>>
>> Which Earthly Battlefields? Good vs. Evil?
>>
>> Counterparts in time? There was a battle over how we, the people, should
>> perceive Time? Lunar goddess-time vs. Solar patriarchal-time?
>>
>> -
>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>>
>
>
>
>
>
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