GR - How old is Bianca? Or: Did Sachsa really die in 1930?

Becky Lindroos bekker2 at icloud.com
Wed Jan 6 23:35:40 CST 2016


Yes, it is disgusting,  but I totally recognize it.  Thanks again,  Laura - sister. 

Becky 


> On Jan 6, 2016, at 7:00 PM, Keith Davis <kbob42 at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> That's disturbing...
> 
> Www.innergroovemusic.com
> 
>> On Jan 6, 2016, at 9:40 PM, <kelber at mindspring.com> <kelber at mindspring.com> wrote:
>> 
>> Isn't it the opposite, though? "I didn't know she was underage!"
>> 
>> I remember when I was 12, still pre-pubescent, still looking forward to the latest Nancy Drew book (though I'd graduated to Sherlock Holmes and Agatha Christie), and still had absolutely no interest in boys. I was walking down the street in Brooklyn with my 14-year-old sister. Our parents were trailing behind - we were on our way to the subway or something. A car pulled up alongside me and my sister and the guys inside were trying to pick us up. My father went berserk and chased the car down the block, screaming "She's only 12 years old!" I was mortified by my dad's behavior. I told him it was no big deal - that stuff happened all the time (it did, starting at around age 10 or 11). And my sister asked: "You didn't care that they were trying to pick up a 14-year-old?"
>> 
>> Laura
>> 
>> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Keith Davis <kbob42 at gmail.com>
>>> Sent: Jan 6, 2016 6:47 PM
>>> To: Becky Lindroos <bekker2 at icloud.com>
>>> Cc: kelber at mindspring.com, pynchon -l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
>>> Subject: Re: GR - How old is Bianca? Or: Did Sachsa really die in 1930?
>>> 
>>> To counter my previous post,  it's pretty common, in my experience, for guys, when referring to a woman way too young, to say she's 12...turns out they're all 12 now...no offense, ladies!
>>> 
>>> Www.innergroovemusic.com
>>> 
>>>> On Jan 6, 2016, at 6:15 PM, Becky Lindroos <bekker2 at icloud.com> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> Good job, Laura - thanks.  
>>>> 
>>>> I never had the idea that Bianca was only 11 or 12 although I know I read those lines.  I “understood” her to be 16 or so for some reason - probably that 11 or 12 was just too impossibly young for Slothrop to be any kind of a good guy (although if he really thinks she is that age he’s not much good at all).   Thank you for your research!   
>>>> 
>>>> Becky 
>>>> 
>>>>> On Jan 6, 2016, at 1:40 PM, kelber at mindspring.com wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> I've been trying to parse this since that Nabokov discussion couple-three weeks ago. I'm using my Penguin 2006 version page numbers, but the PynchonWiki uses a different version (Vintage, I think):
>>>>> During my readings of GR, I've always taken it at face value that Bianca is 11 or 12 when Slothrop has sex with her: "He gets a glimpse of Margherita and her daughter, but there is a density of orgy-goers around them that keeps him at a distance. He knows he's vulnerable, more than he should be, to pretty little girls, so he reckons it's just as well, because that Bianca's a knockout, all right: 11 or 12, dark and lovely …" [Penguin, p. 470-471].
>>>>> 
>>>>> But John Krafft makes this argument (see PynchonWiki): 
>>>>> http://gravitys-rainbow.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=Bianca
>>>>> 
>>>>> How old IS Bianca?
>>>>> Slothrop thinks, "Bianca's a knockout, alright: 11 or 12, dark and lovely [...]" (p.463), but how old is Bianca, really? Well ...
>>>>>  • Bianca is conceived during the filming of Alpdrücken ("I think Bianca is [Schlepzig's] child. She was conceived while we were filming this." - p.395)
>>>>>  • Ilse was conceived after Franz Pökler saw Alpdrücken ("he knew that had to be the night, Alpdrücken night, that Ilse was conceived." - p.397)
>>>>>  • Leni had already given birth to Ilse when she was seeing Peter Sachsa, e.g. "Ilse is awake, and crying. [...] They ought to try Peter after all. He'll have milk." (p.163); and Sachsa is killed during a street action in 1930 ("Taken forcibly over in 1930 by a blow from a police truncheon [...]" - p.152)
>>>>>  • Placing Bianca's conception, say, 6 months to a year before Ilse's (depending on how long it took for Alpdrücken to reach the theatres and how long it took Franz Pökler to go see it), Bianca's birth would have been in 1928 or 1929.
>>>>>  • Slothrop meets Bianca aboard the Anubis in 1945.
>>>>> Thus Bianca must be 16 or 17, yes? (Thanks to John M. Krafft and to Bernard Duyfhuizen, of Pynchon Notes, for the above sleuthing.)
>>>>> 
>>>>> There's a clear sequence of events: Bianca conceived, then Ilse is conceived, then, when Ilse is at least a year or so old, Peter Sachsa dies. And, in a book that doesn't have too many direct references to the date (in favor of indirect references via historical events like Hirohsima, etc.), we're given the date of his death: 1930. Case closed?
>>>>> 
>>>>> Here are some of my objections to Krafft's time-line:
>>>>> 1. Pynchon's intentions with the Slothrop-Bianca sequence: To me, this sequence seems very much about Slothrop, pushing 30 [Penguin, p. 471] having sex with a very underage girl. She looks to him as if she's 11 or 12. Does Pynchon expect the reader to parse through the book, come up with the above-mentioned time line and think, "Ah, silly Slothrop, you're not the creep you think you are for lusting after such a little girl. She's actually 16 or 17."?  If Bianca is 16 or 17, the ( or "a" ) subtext of the scene would be Slothrop thinking he's having sex with a much-younger girl, or Slothrop and Bianca role-playing that she's a much-younger girl. This isn't impossible. Earlier, at the beginning of the orgy sequence,  Margherita and Bianca are role-playing that she's a Shirley Temple-aged tot who deserves a good spanking. 
>>>>> But it just seems unlikely to me that Pynchon would expect the reader to read the text this way - certainly not at first reading, anyway. So he must have, at minimum, been aware that readers would take the 11 or 12 age as a given. Other evidence: Stefania, described as "maybe 18" says: "While they were away, they left Bianca with us, at Bydgoszcz. She has her bitchy moments, but she's really a charming child." [Penguin, p. 469]. Doesn't sound like she's discussing a girl near her own age.
>>>>> In the next section, when the sex scene occurs, Slothrop is dreaming of the White Rabbit from Alice in Wonderland. A possible reference to Lewis Carroll's alleged infatuation with Alice Liddell? Carroll broke abruptly with the Liddell family when Alice was 11. And, of course, there's that possible connection to 12-year-old Lolita.
>>>>> On p. 477, Bianca's breasts are described as "pre-subdeb." The Sub-debs were some sort of sorority for high-school girls back in the day.
>>>>> Also: OK, a whole stream of thought: Margherita the child-murderer whom Bianca must be protected from; Imipolex and Margherita, Imipolex and Weissmann, Imipolex and Slothrop, Imipolex and Gottfried; Pokler, never sure of his daughter Ilse, but fantasizing about sex with her; Bianca and Ilse, their conceptions linked; Gottfried in the rocket, Slothrop inside his own cock while having sex with Bianca ...
>>>>> So many chemical-rocket-abused kids connections. There are I simply can't believe that Pynchon expects us to think that Bianca is really 16 or 17. 
>>>>> 2. But damned, there is that 1930 date! Another time discrepancy:
>>>>> Franz Pokler meets Mondaugen (Penguin, p. 164) right after observing a failed rocket test. This sequence starts two pages earlier. Leni is pregnant with Ilse. Franz is earning a living doing odd jobs, and on this day he's been pasting movie posters on walls (for a Max Schlepzig film). On the next page, he's wandered into the Reinickendorf neighborhood, where he then observes a failed rocket test, after which he looks up and sees Mondaugen (whom he went to technical college - Technische Hochschule - with 7 or 8 years earlier).
>>>>> 
>>>>> Here's the description of the static rocket test: "But the light grew brighter, and the watching figures suddenly started dropping for cover as the rocket now gave a sputtering roar, a long burst, voices screaming get down and he hit the dirt just as the silver thing blew apart …"
>>>>> 
>>>>> This had to be based on this incident, the static test of a Mirak rocket at the Reinickendorf facility in May, 1931:
>>>>> 
>>>>> "In May 1931 Riedel improvised a rocket, using the thrust chamber developed for the Mirak, fed by two long tanks containing liquid oxygen and gasoline, which would form guiding sticks for the forward-mounted engine. The lashed-together rocket rises to 20 m on its first 'static' test. On 14 May a flight-weight version of Riedel's 'flying test stand' takes off into a looping trajectory, sending the VfR experimenters running for cover, but reaching 60 m altitude in the process."
>>>>> 
>>>>> http://www.astronautix.com/lvs/mirak.htm
>>>>> 
>>>>> By this reckoning, Ilse is born in 1931, after Sachsa's death. This birth date, assuming she was conceived months (at minimum) after Bianca, still makes Bianca about 14 years old at the time Slothrop has sex with her. So is Sachsa alive or dead when Ilse is born? Is Pynchon positing a fictional rocket test that took place in 1929 or so? Possibly. But Pynchon really did his homework on the history of the German rocket program (before and after the Nazis took over). Would he really torture his carefully-researched facts just to fit them to Sachsa's 1930 death? There's absolutely no significant reason that I can find that Sachsa needs to have died in 1930. Could Pynchon have made a careless mistake? Or maybe Sachsa didn't actually die in 1930? He's introduced as a ghost-medium during the 1945 seance [Penguin, p. 154], and is described as having been "forcibly taken over in 1930 by a blow from a police truncheon." Could "taken over" mean that he gained his insights into the "other side."? He was leading seances when Leni and baby Ilse visited him. It's pretty hard to read anything other than death in the words "taken over," given the context. Again, could Pynchon have been careless with the choice of 1930? Hard to know what to think here.
>>>>> 
>>>>> 3. Other stray points: Pokler never sure if the girl he's with is Ilse. Could Margherita be abducting, procuring various incarnations of Bianca? We're told that Bianca was conceived during the filming of Alpdrucken. Was this some sort of mental conception in Margherita's head - the "idea" of Bianca was born, and she went on to procure Biancas? Grasping at straws here. Stefania doesn't believe Bianca even has a father. "I doubt she had a father. It was parthenogenesis, she's pure Margherita, if pure is the word I want." [ Penguin, p. 469]
>>>>> 
>>>>> Is Pynchon just playing around with Time? I'd believe it if this were ATD. But the space-time continuum isn't in play in GR, which is very much about Newtonian physics, or, at least, standard engineering formulae. Correct me if there's evidence to the contrary.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Laura
>>>>> (pardon my laziness in adding the required umlauts)
>>>>> 
>>>>> - Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list=pynchon-l
>>>> 
>>>> -
>>>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list=pynchon-l
>>> -
>>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list=pynchon-l
>> 

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