When Thomas Pynchon's novel Mason & Dixon was published in 1997, it marked a deep shift in Pynchon's career and in American letters in general. All of Pynchon's novels had been socially and politically aware: V., The Crying of Lot 49, Gravity's Rainbow, and Vineland are all marked by social criticism and a profound questioning of American values. They have carried the labels of satire and black humor; "Pynchonesque" has come to be associated with erudition, a playful style, anachronisms and puns - and an interest in scientific theories, popular culture, paranoia, and the "military-industrial complex," which may or may not, according to Pynchon's wild and widely populated casts of characters, be the definitive feature of "America." In short, Pynchon's novels were the sine qua non of postmodernism. Mason & Dixon moved beyond postmodernism to use the same style, wit, and erudition to re-create an 18th century when "America" was being formed as both the place and the idea we have come to know. Pynchon's focus on the creation of the Mason-Dixon Line and the governmental and scientific entities responsible for it makes a clearer statement than any of his previous novels about the slavery and imperialism at the heart of the Enlightenment, and Mason & Dixon levels a dark and hilarious critique at this "America." The novel was a New York Times bestseller.This volume of new essays studies the interface between 18th- and 20th-century culture both in Pynchon's novel and in the historical past. It offers fresh thinking about Pynchon's work not only because it deals with his most recent novel, but also because the contributors take up the linkages between the 18th and 20th centuries in studies that are as concerned with culture as with the literary text itself.The scope of the volume is indicated by its four sections: "Time and the Rounds of History," about historiography and narrative temporality; "Consumption Then and Now," which deals with slavery, trade, and consumption; "Space and Power," which confronts the connections between "place" and imperial power in the 18th century; and "Enlightenment Microhistories," which studies in detail three specific 18th-century cultural incidents. Elizabeth Jane Wall Hinds is Professor and Chair of the English Department at SUNY Brockport. Her book Charles Brockden Brown and the Gendered Economics of Virtue was published in 1997.
Author(s): Elizabeth Jane Wall Hinds
Year: 2005
Language: English
Pages: 232
CONTENTS
......Page 6
PREFACE
......Page 8
NOTE ON QUOTATIONS FROM MASON & DIXON......Page 10
The Rounds of History......Page 12
INTRODUCTION:
The Times of Mason & Dixon......Page 14
1: “The Space that may not be seen”: The Form of Historicity in Mason & Dixon......Page 36
Consumption Then and Now......Page 58
2: The Sweetness of Immorality: Mason & Dixon and the American Sins of Consumption......Page 60
3: Consumption on the Frontier:
Food and Sacrament in Mason & Dixon......Page 88
Space and Power......Page 110
4: “America was the only place . . .”: American
Exceptionalism and the Geographic Politics
of Pynchon’s Mason & Dixon......Page 112
5: Postmodernism at Sea: The Quest for Longitude
in Thomas Pynchon’s Mason & Dixon and
Umberto Eco’s The Island of the Day Before......Page 136
Enlightenment Microhistories......Page 156
6: Haunting and Hunting: Bodily Resurrection
and the Occupation of History in Thomas
Pynchon’s Mason & Dixon......Page 158
7: “Our Madmen, our Paranoid”:
Enlightened Communities and the
Mental State in Mason & Dixon......Page 182
8: General Wolfe and the Weavers: Re-envisioning
History in Pynchon’s Mason & Dixon......Page 196
WORKS CITED
......Page 210
NOTES ON THE CONTRIBUTORS
......Page 224
INDEX
......Page 226