CoL49 group reading ch 5 - depressing / babushka?
Mark Kohut
mark.kohut at gmail.com
Tue Jul 2 10:07:04 UTC 2024
Other questions: How does a Young California Republican come to have a
"babushka"? A thing then? always associated
wth older women in my neck f babushka wear---and from ethnic PA, I saw a
lot of them....
I think, paranoid, she just did not want her license plate to be traced
by......Tristero OR the cops...They could learn
her identity.......
Thinking on it, another little bit of text evidence she was fleeing it......
On Tue, Jul 2, 2024 at 2:43 AM Michael Bailey <michael.lee.bailey at gmail.com>
wrote:
> It gets pretty depressing.
>
> I’m interested in relating to the (simulacrum of a) lived experience of the
> characters, Oedipa in particular.
>
> We’ve all had days like that…
>
>
> Here’s something I was puzzled by:
> “…she pattered down the steps into the street, flung a babushka over her
> license plate and screeched away down Telegraph.”
>
> This is right after old Nefastis tries to get her to have sex with him.
>
> But why does she put a babushka over the license plate? Just planning to
> drive dangerously? Confident she can elude pursuit?
>
>
> Anyway, whatever bubble or tower she’s been in, she’s essentially now
> facing the world without her customary filters and there’s a lot of
> experiences that she’s now filing under the rubric of “Tristero”
>
> As the narrator says, “…there was somehow always the post horn. She grew so
> to expect it that perhaps she did not see it quite as often as she later
> was to remember seeing it. A couple-three times would really have been
> enough. Or too much.”
>
>
> Some kind of unsatisfying metanoia has enveloped her and she walks and
> rides around the Bay Area for 24 hours, apparently able to elicit
> confidences from strangers, whether they be children, alcoholics, the
> suicidal lovelorn, or “Negroes”, without breaking her stride.
>
> Dickens used to take long, long walks & isn’t there some lore pertaining to
> the same tendencies in “OBA” (who was the p-lister of old who coined that
> abbreviation for “our beloved author”? Robin Landseadel?) - although, was
> that the disavowed Japanese Playboy interview?
>
> Anyway, the unheralded but ever-present denizens of San Francisco and their
> experience of the city open up to her in her state of mind, which is
> destined to be temporary but (italicized)
> “She was meant to remember.”
>
> The state of mind is unsustainable; if and when she later remembers, it
> won’t be with any Proustian longing to recapture it. But that may be
> because it’s firmly lodging itself, unforgettable.
>
> It may be that, as suggested in the _Slow Learner_ intro, one “mature
> fictional” theme here is she’s coming to terms with death? Pierce’s, and
> death in general as a relief from, a hypothetical final point in the
> trajectories of, all these unsatisfying lives?
>
>
>
> “In the buses all night she listened to transistor radios playing songs in
> the lower stretches of the Top 200, that would never become popular, whose
> melodies and lyrics would perish as if they had never been sung. A Mexican
> girl, trying to hear one of these through snarling static from the bus’s
> motor, hummed along as if she would remember it always, tracing post horns
> and hearts with a fingernail, in the haze of her breath on the window.”
>
> It’s one of the more pleasing images from the chapter.
>
>
> I wonder, is it a faint echo of Kerouac’s Mexican girl?
> Mike Heron wrote a song about her and the _On the Road_ passage:
> https://youtu.be/VGYZW32mxUY?si=n3ohnzpcWbv1AS8c
> --
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