Thomas Pynchon (1937- ) has been acknowledged as “the greatest living
writer in the English-speaking world who almost alone among his
contemporaries . . . has refused to let ‘Pynchon’ stand for anything but
his books” (Mendelson 1978, 1). Pynchon lives incognito, shuns press interviews,
avoids the glare of the footlights of publicity, resists the lure of consumer and
media-dominated society, and refrains from advertisements for himself. One
has only the books to go by since there are no media-controlled images of the
writer to fall back upon. Perhaps, Pynchon is a classic illustration of Eliot’s idea of “escape from personality” or Keats’s view of “negative capability.” Newman
(1986, 11) refers to Pynchon as “a self-effacing prophet of doom . . . the recording
conscience of our demise as a culture and the voice of salvational alternatives.”
These are valuable attributes for a writer who has taken upon himself the task
of addressing the most important cultural and social issues concerning the
plight of man caught in the web of contemporary culture that extols technology
and death rather than humanity and life. Pynchon’s excursions through
contemporary America illuminate, above all, a ‘Thanatoid’ world, a region of
sorrow resembling death and destruction.
Pynchon’s Vineland (1990) appeared on the literary scene seventeen years
after Gravity’s Rainbow (1973). Reviewers immediately saw in Vineland the
terrible implications of a world gone astray. Rushdie (1990, l) found the book to
be “a political novel about what America has been doing to itself, to its children,
all these many years.” Leonard (1990, 281) referred to the novel as “a republic
of metaphors, a theme park of sixties obsessions—television, mysticism,
revolution, rock and roll, Vietnam, drugs, paranoia, and repression.” Leithauser
(1990, 7) called it a “political paranoia” and said that “the novel asks us to
entertain the notion that, beginning with Nixon and culminating with Reagan,
our government came to regard its subclass of easy doping lay abouts—its Zoyd
Wheelers as meriting not merely contempt but brutal repression and, perhaps,
extermination. Deep in the hills of northern California, in the imaginary county
of Vineland from which the book draws its title, a military installation has gone
up for the evident purpose of sowing domestic terror.”
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