Thomas Pynchon and the Dark Passages of History

Thomas Pynchon and the Dark Passages of History
Author: David Cowart
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2012-01-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0820337099

Thomas Pynchon helped pioneer the postmodern aesthetic. His formidable body of work challenges readers to think and perceive in ways that anticipate--with humor, insight, and cogency--much that has emerged in the field of literary theory over the past few decades. For David Cowart, Pynchon's most profound teachings are about history--history as myth, as rhetorical construct, as false consciousness, as prologue, as mirror, and as seedbed of national and literary identities. In one encyclopedic novel after another, Pynchon has reconceptualized historical periods that he sees as culturally definitive. Examining Pynchon's entire body of work, Cowart offers an engaging, metahistorical reading of V.; an exhaustive analysis of the influence of German culture in Pynchon's early work, with particular emphasis on Gravity's Rainbow; and a critical spectroscopy of those dark stars, Mason & Dixon and Against the Day. He defends the California fictions The Crying of Lot 49, Vineland, and Inherent Vice as roman fleuve chronicling the decade in which the American tapestry began to unravel. Cowart ends his study by considering Pynchon's place in literary history. Cowart argues that Pynchon has always understood the facticity of historical narrative and the historicity of storytelling--not to mention the relations of both story and history to myth. Thomas Pynchon and the Dark Passages of History offers a deft analysis of the problems of history as engaged by our greatest living novelist and argues for the continuity of Pynchon's historical vision.

Abysmal

Abysmal
Author: Gunnar Olsson
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 568
Release: 2010-03-15
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0226629325

People rely on reason to think about and navigate the abstract world of human relations in much the same way they rely on maps to study and traverse the physical world. Starting from that simple observation, renowned geographer Gunnar Olsson offers in Abysmal an astonishingly erudite critique of the way human thought and action have become deeply immersed in the rhetoric of cartography and how this cartographic reasoning allows the powerful to map out other people’s lives. A spectacular reading of Western philosophy, religion, and mythology that draws on early maps and atlases, Plato, Kant, and Wittgenstein, Thomas Pynchon, Gilgamesh, and Marcel Duchamp, Abysmal is itself a minimalist guide to the terrain of Western culture. Olsson roams widely but always returns to the problems inherent in reason, to question the outdated assumptions and fixed ideas that thinking cartographically entails. A work of ambition, scope, and sharp wit, Abysmal will appeal to an eclectic audience—to geographers and cartographers, but also to anyone interested in the history of ideas, culture, and art.

Approaches to Teaching Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 and Other Works

Approaches to Teaching Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 and Other Works
Author: Thomas Schaub
Publisher: Approaches to Teaching World L
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2008
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN:

As teachers well know, the elements that make Thomas Pynchon exciting to read and study—the historical references, the multilayered prose, and the postmodern integration of high and low cultures and science and literature—often constitute hurdles to undergraduate and graduate readers alike. The essays gathered in this volume turn these classroom challenges into assets, showing instructors how to make the narratives' frustration of reader expectations not only intellectually rewarding but also part of the joy of reading The Crying of Lot 49, Gravity's Rainbow, Mason & Dixon, and other Pynchon works, short and long. Like all volumes in the Approaches to Teaching series, the collection opens with a survey of original and supplementary materials. The essays that follow offer an array of classroom techniques: among them, ways to contextualize the novels in their historical settings, from Puritan America through World War II and the volatile 1960s; to use the texts to explore racial and gender politics and legacies of colonialism; and to make Pynchon's elaborate prose style accessible to students. Teachers will also find sample syllabi for courses solely on Pynchon as well as suggestions for incorporating his work into graduate and undergraduate classrooms at a range of institutions.

American Postmodernity

American Postmodernity
Author: Ian D. Copestake
Publisher: Peter Lang Limited, International Academic Publishers
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2003
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN:

This book brings together nine original essays from Pynchon scholars around the world whose work furthers the debate concerning the nature of perceived shifts in the sensibility, style and subject-matter of Pynchon's fiction from The Crying of Lot 49 to Mason & Dixon. Of particular concern is the complex relationship between Pynchon's challenging and evolving oeuvre and notions of postmodernity which this volume's focus on Pynchon's most recent fiction helps bring up-to-date. Five of the collection's essays examine the writer's achievement in Mason & Dixon and were first presented in 1998 as papers at King's College, London, as part of International Pynchon Week. The volume includes contributions from renowned Pynchon scholars such as David Seed, David Thoreen and Francisco Collado Rodríquez, and offers perspectives on Pynchon's achievement in The Crying of Lot 49, Vineland and Mason & Dixon which view those works in relation to a fascinating variety of subjects such as hybridity, mapmaking and representation, the work of Marshall McLuhan, American comic traditions, metafiction, madness in American fiction, science and ethics. Reconfirmed throughout is the ethical seriousness of a writer who remains one of American literature's most fascinating, important and ever elusive figures.

Radical Hope in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon

Radical Hope in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon
Author: Phillip Grayson
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 143
Release: 2022-09-09
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1666911690

Radical Hope in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon: The Moon and Meteor provides a careful consideration of the author's career, examining the ways in which the subversion of his early novels feeds into the radical optimism of his later works. The book's first half explores the author's use of the image of the Moon as a romanticized ideal that is irreparably corrupted by and corruptly manipulated by forces of worldly power. The second half takes up the meteor as an image of impending violence that has yet to be full realized, finding in the unlikely possibility of that violence being somehow averted, a reckless sort of hope. This foolhardy but nonetheless real hope to escape from violent, oppressive structures and forge a real ethical obligation to the other marks the development of these paired metaphors, and through them Pynchon introduces the possibility, however slight, that literature, with its powerfully intimate relationship with consciousness, may at least sustain that hope.

Pynchon and the Political

Pynchon and the Political
Author: Samuel Thomas
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 214
Release: 2010-04-02
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1135911428

Thomas Pynchon's writing has been widely regarded as an exemplary form of postmodern fiction. It is characterized as genre-defying and enigmatic, as a series of complex and esoteric language games. This study attempts to demonstrate, however, that an oblique yet compelling sense of the "political" Pynchon disappears all too easily under the mantle of postmodernity. Innovative and unsettling discussions of freedom, war, labour, poverty, community, democracy, and totalitarianism are passed over in favour of constrictive scientific metaphors and theoretical play. Against this current, this study analyses Pynchon's fiction in terms of its radical dimension, showing how it points to new directions in the relationship between the political and the aesthetic.

Discursive Life in Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon

Discursive Life in Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon
Author: Paul Hutchison
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2006
Genre: Industrial policy
ISBN:

Abstract: The following illustrates how Thomas Pynchon's epistemological and political scrutiny of discourse is thematically manifest in Mason & Dixon, and examines how his opposition to dominant or official histories is strongly related to the postmodern critique of master narratives. On the level of plot and theme, Mason & Dixon undermines the credibility of authoritative historical accounts and promotes communal or local discursive modes like oral histories that develop organically among a people as opposed to being imposed upon them from above. Mason & Dixon undermines the distinctions between ideologically driven stories and ostensibly positivist, or objective modes of understanding the world. Reducing all forms of knowledge to historically and culturally contingent discourses, Pynchon invokes how these discourses endow existence with meaning and shape social reality. The novel thus depicts how dialogic interaction generates socio-ideological evolution and integration.