The identity of
Thomas Pynchon is as elusive as the sticky, complex webs of meaning woven
into his prose.
As America's most "famous" hidden author, Pynchon produces works
which
simultaneously
deal with issues of disappearance and meaning, of identity and nothingness in a
fashion that
befuddles some and delights others. He speaks to the world from his invisible
pulpit,
hiding behind a
curtain of anonymity that safely disguises his personality from the prying eyes
of
critics and fans
alike. Without a public author presence, readers are forced to derive the
identity
of the author
instead from the author's actual works. When searching for the identity of
Pynchon,
and indeed the
notion of identity itself, the novels of Thomas Pynchon offer an interesting
starting
point.
Questions of
identity and meaning are shrouded beneath a veil of conspiracy in The Crying of
Lot 49, Pynchon's
second novel and his shortest. Throughout the novel there are snatches of
hidden agendas
and mysterious plans; it is a world run by Pierce Inverarity, a character who
is
dead when the
novel opens yet remains an active presence throughout the work. This seems to
fit Pynchon's
situation rather nicely as the ghostly moderator of a tired world, leading his
main
character Oedipa
Maas on a quest for meaning while blindly groping for clues about a
conspiratorial
mail system known only as the Trystero. Oedipa's quest echos the quest of
everyone; she
wishes for an identity that makes some sense within the framework of her world.
Thomas Pynchon,
by erasing himself from the public sphere, is questing for identity in his own
right through his
writings, letting Mrs. Maas do the searching for him.
Little is known
about Pynchon's life, and no one who knows him seems to be willing to add to
the miniscule
pile of information currently available about him. His most recent published
photograph dates
back to 1953. Beginning at the beginning, he was born on May 8, 1937 in
Glen Cove, New
York. He attended Cornell University and received a degree in English in
1959. He worked
at Boeing Company in Seattle as a technical writer until his first novel V.
appeared in 1963
(Gray 70). From that point onward, Pynchon vanished from the public eye.
Information about
any part of Pynchon's life after V. is only based on rumor or hearsay. There is
a hodgepodge of
rumors concerning Pynchon's life and why he went into hiding, diligently
collected and
collated by legions of his fans. Some of the proposed reasons why he is hiding
include: "he
is brain-damaged as a result of an LSD overdose, he suffers from writer's
block, the
CIA is after him,
and he is ashamed of his Bugs Bunny teeth" (Diamond 65). By isolating
himself,
Pynchon has
created an aura of mystery that surrounds his persona and is reduplicated
within his
writings. Many of
the stories about Pynchon himself are amusing, and have the flavor of
suburban
folklore:
[Some] stories
have Pynchon sealed inside a barrel and rolled into a wedding to
avoid
photographers, constructing a cocoon of engineering paper around his work
space to ensure
privacy when he worked at Boeing and responding to Norman
Mailer's
invitation for a drink with a note saying, "No thanks. I only drink
Ovaltine."
(Diamond 65)
These tales seems
to be the response of a public "obsessively trying to invent a man who
obsessively
refuses to reveal himself" (Diamond 66). Why would an author go to such
pains to
remain anonymous?
The American public appears to be unable to handle the concept of a
person who does
not desire to be famous. By not showing up to play the game, Thomas
Pynchon has made
himself infinitely more mysterious than his actual self could ever be.
When the identity
of the author is absent, the gap between the author and the written word flares
to life. Why does
the need exist for constant speculation over Pynchon's personality and his
real-life
identity? When someone looks at a book, they naturally assume that it came from
somewhere. This
leads to the question of its origin. Currently, the easy answer to this
question
lies in the idea
of the author, the originator, the creator, the name on the cover. This
"individual"
is the source of
the work and the person who deserves "credit" for producing the
written
product.
Normally, the author is associated with a face and some biographical
information
gleaned from
newspaper and magazine accounts. These elements humanize the author; there is
no magic aura
surrounding him or her. Readers come to recognize the familiar face of an
author
on television or
in the newspapers, and a bond is created. Readers know the author because
they know his or
her creations, and the physical presence of the author reinforces this link.
Pynchon takes
this notion and shatters it by making himself absent. There is no current
photograph of
him, no recent biographical information about him, and there is no guarantee
that
there ever will
be anymore information available about him before he dies. Pynchon simply
supplies the
readers with text, and expects them to understand it on their own. Readers are
not
allowed to
connect with Pynchon except through his writings. This leads to rampant
speculation
about Pynchon's
personality and life as derived from common topics throughout his work.
If Pynchon made
himself public, would his literary works be affected in any way? Part of the
fascination of
Thomas Pynchon is the fact that he is hidden away from the public. There is a
mystique
surrounding him that can not be duplicated if he were public and open about his
life.
Judith Chambers
recounts one distinguished Pynchon scholar's tale of his quest for Pynchon:
After several
years of rigorous tracking, he found himself some fifty yards away
from Pynchon's
residence, only to wonder why he would presume to intrude on a
man whom he both revered
and respected. He walked away. (6)
By revealing the
secret of Thomas Pynchon to himself, the scholar would destroy all of his
preconceived
notions about his literary idol. The real Thomas Pynchon can not live up to the
one
created by his
novels. Corlies Smith, Pynchon's former editor, states that "[Pynchon]
leads a
perfectly
ordinary life. The fact of the matter is [his vanishing] has created much
greater publicity
than if he'd gone
on Donahue" (Diamond 66). Without the mystery surrounding his self-
imposed exile,
Thomas Pynchon would probably not be as publicly recognized as he is now. By
remaining
conspicuously absent from the public sphere, Pynchon is almost inviting his
readers to
try and construct
who he is from what he writes. This is a puzzle that as of yet remains
unsolved.
Michel Foucault,
in his essay What Is an Author?, has the following to say about what he calls
"the death
of the author":
Our culture has
metamorphosed this idea of narrative, or writing, as something
designed to ward
off death. . . This relationship between writing and death is
manifested in the
effacement of the writing subject's individual characteristics. Using
all the
contrivances that he sets up between himself and what he writes, the writing
subject cancels
out the signs of his particular individuality. (Foucault 143)
When presented
with the idea of "the death of the author," Pynchon is an excellent
case study, as
there is no
actual author present to which readers can derive human fallibilities. The "effacement"
of Pynchon's
"individual characteristics" is made whole and complete through his
absence from
the public
sphere. Pynchon is essentially already dead, and can only communicate with the
world
through his
writings.
This
communication, however, can never be entirely trusted, as scrambled perceptions
and
meaningless
messages abound in much of Pynchon's work. Pynchon is notorious for joking and
punning his way
through serious and often important subjects; his absence from the public
sphere
is possibly no
exception. He is the living embodiment of a "dead author." Pynchon is
a voice
without a body,
and this lends a somewhat inhuman aspect to his creations. Who is Thomas
Pynchon? It is
necessary to understand the source of literature to comprehend the literature
itself? The
postmodern response is to state the negative, but is our reading of Thomas
Pynchon's
work affected
just as much by his absence than if he were public and open to the world? Tony
Tanner asserts,
"Pynchon's 'disappearance' does have a relevance to his work" (14).
This
relevance is
through problems about identity and meaning discovered and explored by
Pynchon's
characters. The study of Pynchon's work is affected by his lack of public
presence.
By maintaining
his absence from public life, Pynchon is "in enviable possession of a
mystique far
bigger than any
single, flawed, vulnerable human" (Gray 70). The presence of a void is
felt
through its
absence.
Questions of
identity and meaning abound in Pynchon's second novel, The Crying of Lot 49.
The identity of
Pynchon can be searched for by examining the characters within the novel, most
importantly the
heroine Oedipa Maas, the ghostly Pierce Inverarity, and the theater director
Randolph
Driblette. Inverarity and Driblette could be said to mimic Pynchon in disparate
ways,
but Oedipa Maas
is important as well when confronting the concept of identity.
Pierce Inverarity
is already dead when the novel opens. His death is what initially fuels the
plot of
the novel, since
Oedipa Maas is named as the executrix of Inverarity's will. His name might have
an allegorical
meaning deriving from the Latin root inveritas, which translates to not
truthful or
without truth.
Indeed, Inverarity is not the voice of truth in the novel, but instead the
voice of
confusion and
misconception. The last instance where Oedipa comes in contact with Inverarity
is
via a phone
conversation a year before his death. In that conversation, Inverarity
constantly
switches voices,
oscillating from "heavy Slavic" to "comic-Negro" to "a
Gestapo officer" to
"Lamont
Cranston" (Pynchon 11). The final voice Oedipa hears before the
conversation ends is
that of Lamont
Cranston a. k. a. The Shadow from the early days of radio broadcasting.
Inverarity
remains as a "shadow" throughout the rest of the novel, haunting
Oedipa's movements
and supplying a
twisted explanation for her entire situation with the secret Trystero mailing
system. Oedipa
discovers that Inverarity owns the majority of important sites in San Narciso,
all
of which deal
with the Trystero system in some way. At one point, Oedipa remarks, "What
the
hell didn't he
own?" (39). The presence of Inverarity offers an easy solution to the web
of
conspiracy that
surrounds Oedipa later in the novel; Pierce Inverarity created the Trystero as
an
elaborate plot to
fool Oedipa Maas. This explanation doesn't digest well with the sea of clues
that Oedipa is
collecting and with her ow
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