Writing (at) the End: Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge

In work spanning six decades, Thomas Pynchon has depicted a plural world reduced to mechanization, automation, and control. In doing so he has done more than any American author to reveal to readers the posthuman future. This essay seeks Pynchon’s human(e) response to these eschatological forces. It...

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Main Author: Brian Chappell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Française d'Etudes Américaines 2017-09-01
Series:Transatlantica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/8374
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author Brian Chappell
author_facet Brian Chappell
author_sort Brian Chappell
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description In work spanning six decades, Thomas Pynchon has depicted a plural world reduced to mechanization, automation, and control. In doing so he has done more than any American author to reveal to readers the posthuman future. This essay seeks Pynchon’s human(e) response to these eschatological forces. It does so by examining how Pynchon concludes his works. Referring to Peter Rabinowitz’s theory of endings, this essay argues that at the conclusion of his novels, Pynchon takes on a voice that speaks more urgently than the pluralism and polyphony that permeate his pages. This move from noise to clarity is a move from spiritualism to spirituality. Even though possibilities are diminishing, and the end seems near, there remains the opportunity for communion, shared vulnerability, family, and friendship. This essay focuses on how this move transpires in Bleeding Edge, a novel that presents, potentially, the culmination of historical-eschatological movements toward reduction and domination. But the novel concludes with an extended meditation on family love and female friendship, in a way that conveys Pynchon’s source of hope. Focusing on his endings reveals an enduring humanism at the core of Pynchon’s work that can fuel further study in the age of terror, surveillance, domination, and dehumanization.
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spelling doaj-art-aacd0d52063d43108082cea9f68d99be2025-01-30T10:46:12ZengAssociation Française d'Etudes AméricainesTransatlantica1765-27662017-09-01210.4000/transatlantica.8374Writing (at) the End: Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding EdgeBrian ChappellIn work spanning six decades, Thomas Pynchon has depicted a plural world reduced to mechanization, automation, and control. In doing so he has done more than any American author to reveal to readers the posthuman future. This essay seeks Pynchon’s human(e) response to these eschatological forces. It does so by examining how Pynchon concludes his works. Referring to Peter Rabinowitz’s theory of endings, this essay argues that at the conclusion of his novels, Pynchon takes on a voice that speaks more urgently than the pluralism and polyphony that permeate his pages. This move from noise to clarity is a move from spiritualism to spirituality. Even though possibilities are diminishing, and the end seems near, there remains the opportunity for communion, shared vulnerability, family, and friendship. This essay focuses on how this move transpires in Bleeding Edge, a novel that presents, potentially, the culmination of historical-eschatological movements toward reduction and domination. But the novel concludes with an extended meditation on family love and female friendship, in a way that conveys Pynchon’s source of hope. Focusing on his endings reveals an enduring humanism at the core of Pynchon’s work that can fuel further study in the age of terror, surveillance, domination, and dehumanization.https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/8374Thomas PynchonpostmodernismdialogismBleeding Edgeposthumanismontological poetics
spellingShingle Brian Chappell
Writing (at) the End: Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge
Transatlantica
Thomas Pynchon
postmodernism
dialogism
Bleeding Edge
posthumanism
ontological poetics
title Writing (at) the End: Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge
title_full Writing (at) the End: Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge
title_fullStr Writing (at) the End: Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge
title_full_unstemmed Writing (at) the End: Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge
title_short Writing (at) the End: Thomas Pynchon’s Bleeding Edge
title_sort writing at the end thomas pynchon s bleeding edge
topic Thomas Pynchon
postmodernism
dialogism
Bleeding Edge
posthumanism
ontological poetics
url https://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/8374
work_keys_str_mv AT brianchappell writingattheendthomaspynchonsbleedingedge