The Tarot and Gravity's Rainbow
David Morris
fqmorris at gmail.com
Thu Apr 13 21:51:37 CDT 2017
In GR the tower is obviously the rocket.
Slothrup is the Fool.
I don't know Tarot, but I'd bet an oppositional analysis of these two cards
might be fruitful.
David Morris
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 7:27 PM John Bailey <sundayjb at gmail.com> wrote:
> From my limited knowledge, the Death card is the one about destruction
> as a catalyst for creation or change, and maybe keys into the von
> Braun quote that opens the first part of the book.
> The Tower, on the other hand, is bad all the way down. Signifies utter
> ruin, tragedy in the dramatic sense, physical calamity, destruction
> without an internally redeeming element. In Pynchon's mythos I would
> correlate it with the idea that an artificially enclosed system like a
> hothouse can't be maintained for long without increasing your bad juju
> byproducts, and in GR the almost cosmic level of horror that results
> from the scale of the Death Order in place is definitely a Tower
> thing.
>
> On Fri, Apr 14, 2017 at 4:45 AM, Jade Becker <jbecker13 at georgefox.edu>
> wrote:
> > Hey folks,
> >
> > Been trying to make sense of Pynchon's use of the Tarot throughout GR.
> Looks
> > like GR has yet again given me an opportunity to plumb the depths of my
> > ignorance.
> >
> > The Tower is referenced frequently, and I see that it signifies, at
> least in
> > part, a kind of destruction=>creation.
> >
> > I'd love to hear some of your thoughts about how these things work
> > throughout the text.
> >
> > Jade
> -
> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list=pynchon-l
>
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