Changes

ATD 81-96

1,752 bytes removed, 04:52, 30 November 2006
/* Page 95 */
plutocrats: members of the wealthy class controlling a government
==Page 95==
'''a radius of annhilation that, if it could not include the ones who deserved it, might as well include himself '''<br>
Hair-raising to see Pynchon put the suicide bomber/terrorists back in the US where they also have a home; the effect also to make them (the suicide bombers over there somewhere - Afghanistan, Iraq, etc.) a bit less foreign, and to make ourselves, good US citizens, appear foreign to ourselves: how could we, civilized Americans interested only in democracy and freedom for all, have these feelings and desires?
 
September 11, 2001 and its consequences seem obvious on this novel, at least in these first 95 pages.
 
The author of this note acknowledges that some ATD readers do not agree that this passage refers to contemporary suicde bombers. But, arguably, Pynchon gets to have his cake and eat it too. By writing about a remote historical period, he's removed himself a considerable authorial distance, but he also
gets the benefit of resonance with current events by choosing which facts to highlight from the period, by choosing the diction with which to present them, all building on the reverberations inherent in the subject matter. Strict constructionists may point to the text and say, There's no mention of September 11, 2001, or President Bush, or suicide bombers in Afghanistan specifically on the page here, such an interpretation can't be supported by the text & etc. - and that's a reasonable point to make. The result is, so far in ATD, the frequent evocation of US post-September 11 in terms that will be difficult to nail down, but which are, at the same time, obvious to most readers if not all. Nothing new in Pynchon, of course, this sort of displacement makes his texts notoriously slippery.
==Page 96==
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