Group Read
Smoke Teff
smoketeff at gmail.com
Fri Dec 22 16:10:39 CST 2017
"It's twenty years," recalls the Revd, "since we all topped the Allegheny
Ridge together, and stood looking out at the Ohio Country,--so fair, a
Revelation, meadow'd to the Horizon[...]"
On Thu, Dec 21, 2017 at 6:03 PM, Monte Davis <montedavis49 at gmail.com> wrote:
> Yes, across the board. Coming out of the war there was much more dynamism,
> more synergy between government finance, private capitalism (or
> quasi-private like the East India Company), and mercantile/imperial policy.
> Like the US in WWII, the UK in the Sven Year War borrowed and spent on an
> unprecedented scale that frightened Trasuruy officials-- and came out
> richer and more powerful than it started.
>
> The main point I'm driving at is not to let historical tunnel vision
> collapse the 350-year history of the British Empire into one fixed thing;
> when M&D start their travels there's a lot about it that is new and "where
> is this taking us?" TO THEM AS ENGLISHMEN OF THE TIME. I think P. knew
> that, which makes their exchanges about what they're seeing more
> believeable and less "As you know, Jere..." exposition P. contrived to put
> in their mouths for our benefit.
>
> On Thu, Dec 21, 2017 at 5:42 PM, Smoke Teff <smoketeff at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Good stuff, Monte--I just finished that Anderson book on the Seven Years
>> War you recommended, btw.
>>
>> Just riffing, correct me where wrong...
>>
>> It seems like one of the things that happens to the British Empire
>> through that war--driving its emergence as a much bigger and different
>> version of itself--is the Empire starts to learn and benefit from just how
>> powerful a force raw capital (via conquest, control of trade) is in making
>> & defending empire. Maybe this is the emergence of capitalism, inflected by
>> colonialism, through the prevailing lens of mercantilism.
>>
>> The BE starts increasingly targeting small Caribbean islands and other
>> European colonies/trade routes not only for their territorial/tactical
>> importance per se, nor because of any longstanding sentimental feelings (as
>> with much of the English emphasis on protecting Hanover) toward some
>> particular place/people, but because some of these islands simply yield
>> immense profits to their colonizers, which itself helps with the war effort
>> and starts to increasingly become the lifeblood of empire.
>>
>> Whereas pre-7YW Europe involves a delicate balance of power among the
>> major European states, Britain leaves the 7YW as such a massive and
>> far-flung empire (so capital-hungry not only because of the war but because
>> of the new scale of the empire itself) that it essentially becomes
>> dependent on maximally exploiting its holdings. Land cannibalism. And
>> messy, at that. The BE having no real idea of how much chaos is fermenting
>> in the American colonies--economic and political unrest, the frontier, the
>> Indians, etc.
>>
>> On Thu, Dec 21, 2017 at 4:07 PM, Monte Davis <montedavis49 at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Full agreement as far as the first read goes, Mike. Later, though -- I
>>> won'rt repeat some posts on the Seven Years War (locally for USAns, the
>>> French & Indian War) from the last year or so, but perhaps worth tucking
>>> away:
>>>
>>> 1) As M&D themselves discover at sea, it was a *world* war. Most of it
>>> was in Europe, India, the Caribbean islands, and at sea, with the North
>>> American part a comparatively minor theater... even if it led, unplanned,
>>> to (1) control of Canada, (2) newly confident and uppity colonies along the
>>> Atlantic seaboard, and (3) indirectly, French disengagement from the
>>> Mississippi-Missouri basin that would become the Louisiana Purchase of
>>> 1803. USAn readers naturally think it's all about us, but IIRC at the time
>>> of the war of independence the UK's trade with the Caribbean sugar islands
>>> was several times that with all the about-to-be-US colonies together.
>>>
>>> 2) The British Empire emerging in the mid-1760s was not just much
>>> larger, but very different -- in organization and in Britons' attitudes
>>> toward their place in the world -- from what it had been for the previous
>>> ~150 years. Much about it was new to M&D and their contemporaries. In some
>>> ways they have more in common with Slothrop in an about-to-be-Americanized
>>> Europe, or the 1950s USN sailors in the Mediterranean in V., than with
>>> Godolphin and Porpentine, or the Foreign Office mandarins in AtD.
>>>
>>> On Thu, Dec 21, 2017 at 1:13 PM, Mike Sauve <mpsauve at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> This is a huge overgeneralization, but the whole pre-America portion is
>>>> the most forgivable during which to suspend the "why" question. It's also
>>>> when it will come up the most, but upon first read, unless you're the type
>>>> to research and make notes of every page for that kind of
>>>> comprehension--it's this part you can just let wash over you, enjoy the
>>>> repartee, the jokes, etc. The East India Company and Clive of Fucking India
>>>> and all that is contextually important, but if you're not 100% clear on the
>>>> forces at work in the beginning, know that the narrative gains a far
>>>> greater cohesion and clarity once they reach the good old US of A.
>>>>
>>>> On Thu, Dec 21, 2017 at 10:08 AM, L E Bryan <lebryan at sonic.net> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I seem to always get stuck on “WHY?” questions.
>>>>>
>>>>> But, of course there is that favorite advent section of GR with Roger
>>>>> and Jessica. I read it out loud to my friends - when I have any that will
>>>>> tolerate my idiosyncrasies - or just to myself around this time of year.
>>>>>
>>>>> Lawrence, who started M&D again, last night…
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> > On Dec 21, 2017, at 2:08 AM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>> >
>>>>> > Simple banal observation which, like everything in this great writer,
>>>>> > can lead to good discussion:
>>>>> >
>>>>> > V and M & D begin in winter, near Christmas. Seemingly P's favorite
>>>>> holiday.
>>>>> >
>>>>> > True? and why?
>>>>>
>>>>> -
>>>>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
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