“’Tis a reckless Debowch of a Game”: Chance and Resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s Novels

This paper seeks to consider games — and more particularly card games and gambling — as an American form of resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s novels. As opposed to agôn, a category of games that Roger Caillois delineates in Man, Play and Games (1958) as “a combat in which equality of chances is artific...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bastien Meresse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAES 2020-11-01
Series:Angles
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/angles/2672
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849735842720907264
author Bastien Meresse
author_facet Bastien Meresse
author_sort Bastien Meresse
collection DOAJ
description This paper seeks to consider games — and more particularly card games and gambling — as an American form of resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s novels. As opposed to agôn, a category of games that Roger Caillois delineates in Man, Play and Games (1958) as “a combat in which equality of chances is artificially created, in order that the adversaries should confront each other under ideal conditions,” alea encompasses games of chance which are “a strict negation of controlled effort, […] efficacious resort to skill, power, and calculation, and self-control; respect for the rules; the desire to test oneself under conditions of equality.” It will be my contention that alea, in Pynchon’s novels, offers the possibility of an alternative world and becomes a necessary mode of resistance in the face of a plenty-flushed adversity which threatens to hold sway over the American continent. For Pynchon’s players, more often than not cheaters and fraudsters, use such games of chance to fulfil their longing for emancipation and flight, at a time in history when the American continent is about to be mapped by the abstractions of colonial companies and Enlightenment science. Gaming clubs — ranging from taverns in Mason & Dixon to casinos and gambling dens in Gravity’s Rainbow (1973), Against the Day (2006), and Inherent Vice (2009) — can be recognized as heterotopian sites where otherwise dispersed groups of people momentarily gather in order to gain freedom from the ruling few. Although the moralism of Puritan ministers sternly reminded their flocks to refrain from wasting their earnings on rash bets, gambling can thus be envisioned as a way to escape from the hyper-productivity expounded by modernity, intersecting with Walter Benjamin’s discourse on the materialist form of gambling within industrial capitalism. Following Gerda Reith’s and Susan Strange’s arguments in The Age of Chance (1999) and Casino Capitalism (1986), I will further argue that, in the new capitalist economy, Pynchon anticipates in his novels the attention of late capitalism to new areas for capitalization, overseeing both the commodification of idleness and the insinuation into the fabric of existence of the same risk assessment strategy as that applied by capitalism.
format Article
id doaj-art-7b9cc8459f6c4bfabd51e664ddd6d226
institution DOAJ
issn 2274-2042
language English
publishDate 2020-11-01
publisher SAES
record_format Article
series Angles
spelling doaj-art-7b9cc8459f6c4bfabd51e664ddd6d2262025-08-20T03:07:27ZengSAESAngles2274-20422020-11-011110.4000/angles.2672“’Tis a reckless Debowch of a Game”: Chance and Resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s NovelsBastien MeresseThis paper seeks to consider games — and more particularly card games and gambling — as an American form of resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s novels. As opposed to agôn, a category of games that Roger Caillois delineates in Man, Play and Games (1958) as “a combat in which equality of chances is artificially created, in order that the adversaries should confront each other under ideal conditions,” alea encompasses games of chance which are “a strict negation of controlled effort, […] efficacious resort to skill, power, and calculation, and self-control; respect for the rules; the desire to test oneself under conditions of equality.” It will be my contention that alea, in Pynchon’s novels, offers the possibility of an alternative world and becomes a necessary mode of resistance in the face of a plenty-flushed adversity which threatens to hold sway over the American continent. For Pynchon’s players, more often than not cheaters and fraudsters, use such games of chance to fulfil their longing for emancipation and flight, at a time in history when the American continent is about to be mapped by the abstractions of colonial companies and Enlightenment science. Gaming clubs — ranging from taverns in Mason & Dixon to casinos and gambling dens in Gravity’s Rainbow (1973), Against the Day (2006), and Inherent Vice (2009) — can be recognized as heterotopian sites where otherwise dispersed groups of people momentarily gather in order to gain freedom from the ruling few. Although the moralism of Puritan ministers sternly reminded their flocks to refrain from wasting their earnings on rash bets, gambling can thus be envisioned as a way to escape from the hyper-productivity expounded by modernity, intersecting with Walter Benjamin’s discourse on the materialist form of gambling within industrial capitalism. Following Gerda Reith’s and Susan Strange’s arguments in The Age of Chance (1999) and Casino Capitalism (1986), I will further argue that, in the new capitalist economy, Pynchon anticipates in his novels the attention of late capitalism to new areas for capitalization, overseeing both the commodification of idleness and the insinuation into the fabric of existence of the same risk assessment strategy as that applied by capitalism.https://journals.openedition.org/angles/2672capitalismAmerican literaturePynchon Thomasgambling
spellingShingle Bastien Meresse
“’Tis a reckless Debowch of a Game”: Chance and Resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s Novels
Angles
capitalism
American literature
Pynchon Thomas
gambling
title “’Tis a reckless Debowch of a Game”: Chance and Resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s Novels
title_full “’Tis a reckless Debowch of a Game”: Chance and Resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s Novels
title_fullStr “’Tis a reckless Debowch of a Game”: Chance and Resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s Novels
title_full_unstemmed “’Tis a reckless Debowch of a Game”: Chance and Resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s Novels
title_short “’Tis a reckless Debowch of a Game”: Chance and Resistance in Thomas Pynchon’s Novels
title_sort tis a reckless debowch of a game chance and resistance in thomas pynchon s novels
topic capitalism
American literature
Pynchon Thomas
gambling
url https://journals.openedition.org/angles/2672
work_keys_str_mv AT bastienmeresse tisarecklessdebowchofagamechanceandresistanceinthomaspynchonsnovels