Pynchon's mythography : an approach to Gravity's rainbow

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Bibliographic Information

Pynchon's mythography : an approach to Gravity's rainbow

Kathryn Hume ; [edited by Curtis L. Clark]

(Crosscurrents : modern critiques / Harry T. Moore, general editor, Third series)

Southern Illinois University Press, c1987

Available at  / 38 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 243-253

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The exhausting plenitude of loosely connected detail in "Gravity s Rainbow "makes it a favorite of postmodern critics, who claim it describes a modern, random, unknowable universe. Hume expands the possibilities as she discloses a mythic structure that underlies Pynchon s work and provides easier access to his world. Myth turns chaos into cosmos, Hume explains, describing how the profuse detail of Pynchon s book allows for the creation of a world humankind shapes out of chaos by means of ritual and myth. . . a set of interlocking stories. . . [that] fit into a narrative sequence or mythology that conveys, supports, and challenges cultural values. Pynchon s mythology is not rigidly consistent, Hume notes, but several strands of mythological action. . . serve a stabilizing function in this chaotic book. Pynchon creates his own unheroic hero to show the way for making sense of the fragmented experience of life in the postmodern world."

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