Difference between revisions of "Chapter 1"

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<div id="Benny Profane"> 9/1 - '''Benny Profane'''</div>
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9/1 - '''Benny Profane'''<br />
'''Benny''':One meaning of bennie is: Shortened form of benefit. All services provided to or for soldiers, sailors, airmen or Marines are considered bennies.--Answers.com.<br>
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'''Benny''': Benny is slang for benzedrine, a trademarked amphetamine often prescribed for anxiety. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benzedrine]. Also, ''bene'' [Latin] = "well-intentioned", observes Molly Hite, "The structural metaphor for the 'present' seems to be Profane's habit of yo-yoing, and the well-intentioned (''bene'') Benny himself". The complete quote can be found in the discussion, as it has a spoiler. The "present" in the novel refers to this and other chapters that happen between Christmas Eve, 1955-1956. The book citation is in the discussion. The book has an interesting interpretation of Pynchon's post-modernist narrative.
Another meaning is: short for Benzadrine, a trademarked amphetamine often prescribed for anxiety, also spelled bennie. First discovered serendipitously in 1954. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bennie  Bennie]<br>
+
  
'''Profane''': Since 1912, as defined in ''The Elementary Forms of Religious Life'' by the sociologist Emile Durkheim, profane has had the social meaning of 'everything that is not sacred'.<br>
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'''Profane''': Since 1912, as defined in ''The Elementary Forms of Religious Life'' by the sociologist Emile Durkheim, 'profane' has had the social meaning of 'everything that is not sacred'. [https://science.jrank.org/pages/11185/Sacred-Profane--MILE-DURKHEIM.html/] <br>
"The division of the world into two domains, one containing all that is sacred and the other all that is profane—such is the distinctive trait of religious thought."--Durkheim (p. 34).[http://science.jrank.org/pages/11185/Sacred-Profane--MILE-DURKHEIM.html/''Science Encyclopedia: History of Ideas'', Vol. 5]<br>
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"The division of the world into two domains, one containing all that is sacred and the other all that is profane—such is the distinctive trait of religious thought."--Durkheim (p. 34). [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11186-020-09396-z#:~:text=A%20hierarchy%20of%20holiness%3A%20Separating%20sacred%20from%20profane&text=The%20division%20of%20the%20world,34)]<br>
Latin root: pro "in front of/before"; fanum "temple", i.e. not within the inner sanctum. Benny is "profane" compared to the almost mystical world of historical fiction Stencil (see below) moves through.
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Latin root: ''pro'' "in front of/before"; ''fanum'' "temple", i.e. not within the inner sanctum. Benny is "profane" compared to the almost mystical world of historical fiction Stencil (see below) moves through.
  
<div id="Christmas Eve 1955"> 9/1 - '''Christmas Eve 1955'''<br>
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9/1 - '''Schlemihl'''<br />
The first time that the Continental Air Defense Command (CONAD) received a call concerning Santa's whereabouts: The tradition began after a Colorado Springs-based Sears Roebuck & Co. store advertisement for children to call Santa on a special "hotline" included an inadvertently misprinted telephone number. Instead of Santa, the phone number put kids through to the CONAD Commander-in-Chief's operations "hotline." The Director of Operations, Colonel Harry Shoup, received the first "Santa" call on Christmas Eve 1955.
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A loser or fool; one who is clumsy or hurts others emotionally. [https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/schlemiel#English] The different spelling from the more traditional schlemiel alludes to a novel by Adelbert von Chamisso titled ''Peter Schlemihl'', which tells the story of a man who sells his shadow to the Devil for a "bottomless wallet" only to find that his missing shadow occludes him from society and the woman he loves. He rejects another offer from the Devil to exchange his shadow for his soul and travels the earth in scientific pursuit. A 1953 television version appeared in "Favorite Story" starring DeForest Kelley, aka Dr. McCoy of the Starship Enterprise. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Schlemihl] <br>
[http://www.noradsanta.org/en/history.php/ Tracking Santa]                                                              
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<div id="Norfolk Virginia"> 9/1 - '''Norfolk, Virginia'''</div>
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9/1 - '''Christmas Eve 1955'''<br />
 +
The first time that the Continental Air Defense Command (CONAD) received a call concerning Santa's whereabouts. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NORAD_Tracks_Santa]
 +
<br>
 +
Pynchon worked on aspects of NORAD [later acronym] when he was at Boeing.
 +
 
 +
9/1 - '''Norfolk, Virginia'''<br />
 
Port city.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norfolk%2C_Virginia/ wikipedia]
 
Port city.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norfolk%2C_Virginia/ wikipedia]
The city has a long history as a strategic military and transportation point. Norfolk is home to both the Norfolk Naval Base, the world's largest naval base and was in 1955. Urban renewal, starting  
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The city has a long history as a strategic military and transportation point. Norfolk is home to the Norfolk Naval Base, the world's largest naval base. Urban renewal, starting  
in the 1970s also included the demolition of many prominent city buildings, and large swaths of urban fabric that, were they still in existence today, might be the source of additional historic urban character, a-and including the East Main Street district (where the current civic complex is located), and where Benny starts yo-yoing.<br>
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in the 1970s included the demolition of many prominent city buildings, and large swaths of urban fabric including the East Main Street district (where the current civic complex is located), and where Benny starts yo-yoing.<br>
  
<div id="tin can"> 9/1 - '''his old tin can's'''</div>
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9/1 - '''his old tin can's'''<br />
 
His particular naval ship.  The informal usage of "tin can" refers to a naval destroyer, notorious for relatively light armor.
 
His particular naval ship.  The informal usage of "tin can" refers to a naval destroyer, notorious for relatively light armor.
  
<div id="Sterno can"> 9/1 - '''Sterno can'''</div>
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9/1 - '''Sailor's Grave'''<br />
 +
Profane's destoyer, the USS Scaffold, considered this tavern theirs. The name of the tavern comes from a poem written by Edwin Hubbell Chapin and set to music by George N. Allen. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Hubbell_Chapin] It is also known as "The Ocean Burial". [https://www.musicanet.org/robokopp/usa/oceanbur.htm] Chapin later reworked the poem into a cowboy lament called "Bury me not on the Lone Prairie" which has been covered by many C&W artists including Johnny Cash and Moe Bandy and more recently by The Residents. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bury_Me_Not_on_the_Lone_Prairie] <br>
 +
 
 +
9/1 - '''Sterno can'''<br />
 
Sterno Canned Heat is a fuel made from denatured and jellied alcohol. It is designed to be burned directly from its can.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterno/ wikipedia]
 
Sterno Canned Heat is a fuel made from denatured and jellied alcohol. It is designed to be burned directly from its can.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterno/ wikipedia]
  
<div id="54 Packard Patrician"> 9/1 - '''54 Packard Patrician'''</div>
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9/1 - '''Chief Yeoman'''<br />
 +
A chief yeoman (E-7) would be in charge of administrative and logistical duties aboard a destroyer during WWII. Yeoman is one of the oldest rates in the Navy. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeoman_(United_States_Navy)]
 +
 
 +
[[image:Packard-Patrician-1954.jpg|thumb|right|150px| 1954 Packard Patrician]]9/1 - '''54 Packard Patrician'''<br />
 
The Packard Patrician was an automobile built by the Studebaker-Packard Corporation of Detroit, Michigan, from model years 1951 through the 1956 model.  There was even an eight-passenger model.1958 was the last year of
 
The Packard Patrician was an automobile built by the Studebaker-Packard Corporation of Detroit, Michigan, from model years 1951 through the 1956 model.  There was even an eight-passenger model.1958 was the last year of
 
Packard production.
 
Packard production.
The Packard had a high reputation for quality, for value that would last and Packards are highly-prized by collectors today.
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The Packard had a high reputation for quality, for value that would last and Packards are highly-prized by collectors today. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Packard_Patrician]
  
<div id="seaman deuce"> 10/2 - '''seaman deuce'''</div>
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10/2 - '''seaman deuce'''<br />
A seaman apprentice. See "Deuce Kindred," a character in Pynchon's [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Against the Day''], his 2006
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A seaman apprentice [seaman second class].  
novel.
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<div id="like a yo yo> 10/2 - '''like a yo-yo...maybe a year and a half'''</div>
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10/2 - '''like a yo-yo...maybe a year and a half'''<br />
 
"One year of those times [Fifties] was much like another...there was a lot of aimlessness going around". Introduction to ''Slow Learner'', p.14, by Thomas Pynchon.
 
"One year of those times [Fifties] was much like another...there was a lot of aimlessness going around". Introduction to ''Slow Learner'', p.14, by Thomas Pynchon.
  
<div id="Drunken Sailors...Do With"> 10/2 - '''Drunken Sailors...Do With'''</div>
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10/2 - '''Drunken Sailors...Do With'''<br />
Here, actually beginning on the first page, appears Pynchon's lifelong stylistic use of capitalization--for a certain kind of emphasis?, for a kind of reification?, and for much, much more certainly. See Pynchon's 1997 novel, [http://masondixon.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Mason & Dixon''] for the most extensive use of capitalization.  
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Lyrics to a sea shanty: "What shall we DO WITH a DRUNKEN SAILOR?"
 +
 
 +
Here, actually beginning on the first page, appears Pynchon's lifelong stylistic use of capitalization--for a certain kind of emphasis?, for a kind of reification?, and for much, much more certainly. It also has to do with Pynchon's preoccupation with Germanic history--in German, all nouns are capitalized.  See Pynchon's 1997 novel, [http://masondixon.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Mason & Dixon''] for the most extensive use of capitalization.  
  
<div id="one potential berserk...the glass breaks?)> 10/2 - '''one potential berserk...the glass breaks?),</div>
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10/2 - '''one potential berserk...the glass breaks?'''<br />
 
Cf. Zoyd Wheeler's annual "act of televised insanity" in Pynchon's 1990 novel, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vineland ''Vineland'']
 
Cf. Zoyd Wheeler's annual "act of televised insanity" in Pynchon's 1990 novel, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vineland ''Vineland'']
  
<div id="SP"> 10/2 - '''SP'''</div>
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10/2 - '''SP'''<br />
 
Shore Patrol, the naval 'police'.  
 
Shore Patrol, the naval 'police'.  
  
<div id="Hey Rube">10/2 - '''Hey Rube'''</div>
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10/2 - '''Hey Rube'''<br />
Carnies'--circus folk--call to come together when in a dispute with townspeople.<br>
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Carnies'--circus folk--call to come together when in a dispute with townspeople. Reviewer, writer, Michael Moorcock, who published an early Pynchon story when he was a young magazine editor, has pointed to circuses as motifs in Pynchon, calling [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Against the Day''], a massive "circus" novel.
Misc: reviewer, writer, Michael Moorcock, who published an early Pynchon story when he was a young magazine editor, has pointed to circuses as motifs
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in Pynchon, calling ''Against the Day'', a massive 'circus' novel.
+
  
<div id="V"> 10/2 - '''V'''</div>
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10/2 - '''V'''<br />
 
This is the first appearance of the letter that is the title. It describes
 
This is the first appearance of the letter that is the title. It describes
 
ugly green mercury-vapor lamps. Not positive associations--to say the least-- in Pynchon's world. See [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Against the Day''], passim, especially in the Telluride sections. The V of the lamps recedes to the east, usually a positive association in Pynchon, especially in intellectual connotations.
 
ugly green mercury-vapor lamps. Not positive associations--to say the least-- in Pynchon's world. See [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Against the Day''], passim, especially in the Telluride sections. The V of the lamps recedes to the east, usually a positive association in Pynchon, especially in intellectual connotations.
  
<div id="doggo"> 10/2 - '''doggo'''</div>
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10/2 - '''doggo'''<br />
adverb<br>
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in hiding &#151; used chiefly in the phrase ''to lie doggo''
Etymology: probably from dog<br>
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in hiding -- used chiefly in the phrase ''to lie doggo''. Merriam Webster
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Dictionary.
+
  
<div id="Beatrice"> 11/3 - '''Beatrice'''</div>
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11/3 - '''Beatrice'''<br />
Probable allusion &#151; see 'all barmaids' coming up &#151; to Beatrice, [Beatrice Poltinari] guide through 'Paradise' of Dante's  [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divine_comedy/ ''The Divine Comedy''],
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Probable allusion &#151; see 'all barmaids' coming up &#151; to Beatrice, [Beatrice Poltinari] guide through 'Paradise' of Dante's  [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divine_Comedy ''The Divine Comedy''],
 
whom Dante loves.
 
whom Dante loves.
  
<div id="DesDiv"> 11/3 - '''DesDiv 22'''</div>
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11/3 - '''DesDiv 22'''<br />
 
Destroyer Division 22. Possible allusion to  [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catch22 ''Catch 22''] ?, another now-classic comic, famously anti-war, novel, published in 1961, but sections were published even earlier in magazines.
 
Destroyer Division 22. Possible allusion to  [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catch22 ''Catch 22''] ?, another now-classic comic, famously anti-war, novel, published in 1961, but sections were published even earlier in magazines.
  
<div id="single up all lines"> 11/3 - '''single up all lines'''</div>
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<div id="singleup"> 11/3 - '''single up all lines'''</div>
"Single up all lines" is a common nautical term. Ships are docked with lines doubled -- that is, with two sets of ropes or chains holding the vessel to the dock. To "single up all lines" is to remove the redundant second lines in preparation to make way. See [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Against the Day''] for at least three uses and some thematic meanings.
+
"Single up all lines" is a common nautical term. Ships are docked with lines doubled -- that is, with two sets of ropes or chains holding the vessel to the dock. To "single up all lines" is to remove the redundant second lines in preparation to make way. This phrase, used as either a nautical term or metaphorically appears in [http://cl49.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=Chapter_2#single_up_all_lines  ''The Crying of Lot 49'', p.31]; [http://gravitys-rainbow.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=Pages_488-491#single_up_all_lines  ''Gravity's Rainbow'', p.489]; [http://masondixon.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=Chapter_26:_257-265#Page_258 ''Mason & Dixon'', pp.258 and 260]; [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=ATD_1-25#Page_3 ''Against the Day'', p.3]; and [http://inherent-vice.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=Chapter_8 ''Inherent Vice'', p. 119].  
  
<div id="N O B"> 11/3 - '''N.O.B.'''</div>
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11/3 - '''N.O.B.'''<br />
Naval Operations Base.
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Naval Operations Base. <br />On 17 September, 1943, an accident occurred which bears a lot of resemblance to the potential accidents Pynchon describes in "Togetherness," written while at Boeing: "A NAS [Naval Station] ordnance department truck was pulling four trailers loaded with depth charges on the taxiway between NAS and the NOB piers. Each trailer was designed to carry four aerial depth charges. To save time, two additional charges were loaded on top of each trailer. Compounding the problem, the charges on top were not properly chained down. One of the charges slipped loose and became wedged between the trailer and the ground. The friction of being dragged against the road caused the charge to begin smoking." [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_Station_Norfolk Wikipedia]
  
<div id="Ploy"> 11/3 - '''Ploy'''</div>
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11/3 - '''Ploy'''<br />
 
'ploi'..Function: noun<br>
 
'ploi'..Function: noun<br>
 
Etymology: probably from employ..Date: 1722<br>
 
Etymology: probably from employ..Date: 1722<br>
 
1 : ESCAPADE, FROLIC<br>
 
1 : ESCAPADE, FROLIC<br>
2 a : a tactic intended to embarrass or frustrate an opponent b : a devised or contrived move : STRATAGEM (a ploy to get her to open the door -- Robert B. Parker)<br>
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2 a : a tactic intended to embarrass or frustrate an opponent b : a devised or contrived move : STRATAGEM (a ploy to get her to open the door -- Robert B. Parker)
  
Ploy rendered toothless by the Navy, their ploy, so to speak?
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11/3 - '''Pentothal injection'''<br />
 +
Known as truth serum. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_thiopental Wikipedia]
  
<div id="Pentothal injection"> 11/3 - '''Pentothal injection'''</div>
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12/4 - '''Negro'''<br>
Known as truth serum.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_thiopental/ wikipedia]
+
Negro is a racial term applied to people of Sub Saharan African origin; The word is now largely seen as archaic, usually neutral and, depending on the user, occasionally offensive. However, prior to the shift in the "lexicon" of American and worldwide classification of race and ethnicity in the late 1960s, the appellation was accepted as a normal formal term both by those of African descent as well as non-blacks. Negro means black in Spanish and Portuguese, and the Italian nero is similar (Latin: niger = "black"). [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negro Wikipedia] <br>
Pynchon wit in fine evidence when Ploy sees apocalypse
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when injected and shouts obscenities! Buried cameo of the future writer of
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an apocalyptic novel, said by some---The Pulitzer Prize Board---to be obscene?- [http://gravitys-rainbow.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Gravity's Rainbow'']<br>
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What a ploy! [User: MKohut]
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+
12/4 '''Negro'''<br>
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Negro is a racial term applied to people of Sub Saharan African origin; The word is now largely seen as archaic, usually neutral and, depending on the user, occasionally offensive. However, prior to the shift in the "lexicon" of American and worldwide classification of race and ethnicity in the late 1960s, the appellation was accepted as a normal formal term both by those of African descent as well as non-blacks. Negro means black in Spanish and Portuguese, and the Italian nero is similar (Latin: niger = "black").Wikipedia <br>
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''V.'' is early sixties, before the word shift in the late sixties.
 
''V.'' is early sixties, before the word shift in the late sixties.
  
12/4 '''Dahoud'''<br>
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12/4 - '''Dahoud'''<br>
Name of an inquisitive youth who tended to the camels in El-Jaziri.
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"Dahoud" is the Arabic name for David.
 +
Name of an inquisitive youth who tended to the camels in El-Jaziri. [?]
  
12/4 '''"life is the most precious possession you have?"..."without it, you'd be dead."'''<br>
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12/4 - '''"life is the most precious possession you have?"..."without it, you'd be dead."'''<br />
 
The 'meaning' of life reduced to this? Somehow seems akin to Profane's yo-yoing, or later randomness. Satire of existentialism?  
 
The 'meaning' of life reduced to this? Somehow seems akin to Profane's yo-yoing, or later randomness. Satire of existentialism?  
  
12/4 '''Lights Out'''<br>
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12/4 - '''Lights Out'''<br />
 
lights out at 2200 (10:00 PM)---Navy Boot Camp.
 
lights out at 2200 (10:00 PM)---Navy Boot Camp.
  
12/4 '''snipes'''
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12/4 - '''snipes'''
 
A snipe is naval slang for a member of the engineering crew on a ship. Historically, there was always tension between snipes and the deck crew.
 
A snipe is naval slang for a member of the engineering crew on a ship. Historically, there was always tension between snipes and the deck crew.
 
http://oldsnipe.com/SnipeBegin.html
 
http://oldsnipe.com/SnipeBegin.html
  
<div id="DesLant"> 12/4 - '''DesLant'''</div>
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12/4 - '''bastard file'''<br />
Destroyer Force, North Atlantic Fleet.
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Mill Files (Bastard Cut) are two-sided flat files featuring a single bastard cut pattern as well as a rectangular tapered point for detail work (Two square edges). Bastard cut is a term used to describe the coarseness of the file. A Bastard cut file will be between the coarsest and second cut meaning the teeth are quite coarse and ideal for rapid material removal while still leaving a smooth finish. The Single Cut means that the file has one set of diagonal rows of teeth. [https://www.empireabrasives.com/8-mill-file-bastard-cut/]
  
13/5 '''Mrs. Buffo'''...'''also named Beatrice'''<br>
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12/4 - '''DesLant'''<br />
A basso buffo, a comic bass, a staple of nearly every classic Italian comic opera.
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Destroyer Force, Atlantic Fleet. Established in February 1941. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commander,_Naval_Surface_Forces_Atlantic]
  
13/5 '''dragon-embroidered kimono'''<br>
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13/5 - '''Mrs. Buffo'''...'''also named Beatrice'''<br>
 +
A basso buffo, a comic bass, a staple of nearly every classic Italian comic opera. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bass_(voice_type)#Basso_buffo]
 +
 
 +
13/5 - '''dragon-embroidered kimono'''<br>
 
The Kimono (着物, Kimono? literally "something worn", i.e., "clothes") is the national costume of Japan. Originally kimono indicated all types of clothing, but it has come to mean specifically the full-length traditional garment worn by women, men, and children. Kimonos are T-shaped, straight-lined robes that fall to the ankle, with collars and full-length sleeves. The sleeves are commonly very wide at the wrist, as much as a half meter. Traditionally, on special occasions unmarried women wear kimonos (furisode) with extremely long sleeves that extend almost to the floor. Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimonos <br>
 
The Kimono (着物, Kimono? literally "something worn", i.e., "clothes") is the national costume of Japan. Originally kimono indicated all types of clothing, but it has come to mean specifically the full-length traditional garment worn by women, men, and children. Kimonos are T-shaped, straight-lined robes that fall to the ankle, with collars and full-length sleeves. The sleeves are commonly very wide at the wrist, as much as a half meter. Traditionally, on special occasions unmarried women wear kimonos (furisode) with extremely long sleeves that extend almost to the floor. Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimonos <br>
 
Kimonos were originally worn only by the nobility.
 
Kimonos were originally worn only by the nobility.
  
Given Pynchon's obs of aspects of America, this user wonders if there was
+
After World War II, as Japan's economy gradually recovered, kimono became even more affordable and were produced in greater quantities. Europe and America fashion ideas affected the kimono designs and motifs. japanesekimono http://www.japanesekimono.com/kimono_history.htm
a fad of wearing kimonos in the 50's and 60's, because my mother wore one regularly, with no Japanese connections nor reasons.````[MKohut]````<br>
+
  
Toward a more complete answer: <br>
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13/5 - '''Seventh Fleet'''<br>
During the Showa period 1926-1989, the japanese government curtailed silk production by taxing it to support the military buildup. Kimono designs became less complex and material was conserved. After World War II, as Japan's economy gradually recovered, kimono became even more affordable and were produced in greater quantities. Europe and America fashion ideas affected the kimono designs and motifs. japanesekimono http://www.japanesekimono.com/kimono_history.htm
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The United States 7th Fleet is a naval military formation based in Yokosuka, Japan, with units positioned near South Korea and Japan. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Seventh_Fleet]
  
Souvenir kimonos collected in great numbers by returning GIs (after WW 2) rekindled interest [in kimonos]. This postwar interest in Japan combined with a rekindled interest in the craft aesthetic created a new wave of kimono influence in America during the late 1960s and 1970s.  page 18,
+
13/5 - '''Dewey Gland'''<br>
''Kimono Inspiration: Art and Art-to-Wear in America'' Pomegranate Books,
+
Spelled "Dewy", it means moist, wet--from dew. "Dewy-eyed" means innocent, naive.-M-W Dictionary.
Textile Museum, Washington, D.C. 1996, the book of an exhibit in 1997.
+
Musicians, often guitar and ukelele players, are positive characters in Pynchon's oeuvre. Since music is a great joy in Pynchon's world, musicians seem often to be his archetypal artist figures. See, as context, the myth of Orpheus,"the music of [whose] lyre was so beautiful that when he played, wild beasts were soothed, trees danced, and rivers stood still." [http://education.yahoo.com/reference/encyclopedia/entry/Orpheus]
  
13/5 '''Seventh Fleet'''<br>
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14/6 - '''goat hole'''<br>
The United States 7th Fleet is a naval military formation based in Yokosuka, Japan, with units positioned near South Korea and Japan.
+
 
+
13/5 '''Dewey Gland'''<br>
+
Spelled "Dewy", it means moist, wet--from dew. "Dewy-eyed" means innocent, naive.-M-W Dictionary. The dewy glands of mountian elk are sought for medicinal purposes. Dros"e*ra (?), n. [NL., fr. Gr. dewy.] Bot. A genus of low perennial or biennial plants, the leaves of which are beset with gland-tipped bristles.http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?<br>
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Musicians, often guitar and ukelele players, are positive characters in Pynchon's oeuvre. Since music is a great joy in Pynchon's world, musicians seem often to be his archetypal artist figures. See, as context, the myth of Orpheus,"the music of [whose] lyre was so beautiful that when he played, wild beasts were soothed, trees danced, and rivers stood still." http://education.yahoo.com/reference/encyclopedia/entry/Orpheus
+
 
+
14/6 '''goat hole'''<br>
+
 
The goat is the naval mascot.<br>
 
The goat is the naval mascot.<br>
 
Goat Locker - Chiefs' Quarters and Mess. The term originated during the era of wooden ships, when Chiefs were given charge of the milk goats on board. Nowadays more a term of respect for the age of its denizens.  
 
Goat Locker - Chiefs' Quarters and Mess. The term originated during the era of wooden ships, when Chiefs were given charge of the milk goats on board. Nowadays more a term of respect for the age of its denizens.  
  
14/6 '''wardroom'''<br>
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14/6 - '''wardroom'''<br>
wardroom n : military quarters for dining and recreation for officers of a warship. http://www.dict.die.net/wardroom
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wardroom n : military quarters for dining and recreation for officers of a warship. [http://www.dict.die.net/wardroom]
  
14/6 '''X.O.'''<br>
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14/6 - '''X.O.'''<br>
Executive Officer.
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Executive Officer. 2nd in command to the Captain.
  
14/6 '''Pappy Hod'''<br>
+
14/6 - '''Pappy Hod'''<br>
Of or resembling pap; mushy.<br>
+
 
pap·py2 (păp'ē)  
 
pap·py2 (păp'ē)  
 
n. Informal., pl. -pies.---
 
n. Informal., pl. -pies.---
 
Father<br>
 
Father<br>
 +
Of or resembling pap; mushy.<br>
  
 
hod n. A trough carried over the shoulder for transporting loads, as of bricks or mortar. A coal scuttle.
 
hod n. A trough carried over the shoulder for transporting loads, as of bricks or mortar. A coal scuttle.
http://www.answers.com/topic/hod  
+
[http://www.answers.com/topic/hod]
  
14/6 '''boatswain'''<br>
+
14/6 - '''boatswain'''<br>
 
n : a petty officer on a merchant ship who controls the work of other seamen ...
 
n : a petty officer on a merchant ship who controls the work of other seamen ...
http://dict.die.net/boatswain/
+
[http://dict.die.net/boatswain/]
 +
More commonly written [and pronounced as] "bosun".
  
14/6 '''riggish'''<br>
+
14/6 - '''riggish'''<br>
wanton: said of Cleopatra whom the holy priests praise when she is riggish' (i.e. wanton) ... Anthony & Cleopatra, Shakespeare.
+
wanton: said of Cleopatra whom the holy priests praise when she is riggish' (i.e. wanton) ... Anthony & Cleopatra, Shakespeare.                                                  
  
14/6 '''Pig Bodine'''<br>  
+
14/6 - '''Pig Bodine'''<br>  
 
Notice immaturity and other relevant meanings to simple 'pig'
 
Notice immaturity and other relevant meanings to simple 'pig'
 
1 a : a young domesticated swine not yet sexually mature; broadly : a wild or domestic swine.
 
1 a : a young domesticated swine not yet sexually mature; broadly : a wild or domestic swine.
 
3 : a dirty, gluttonous, or repulsive person.--Merriam-Webster Dictionary<br>
 
3 : a dirty, gluttonous, or repulsive person.--Merriam-Webster Dictionary<br>
American Heritage Dictionary:<br>
 
2. Informal: A person regarded as being piglike, greedy, or gross. 3a. A crude block of metal, chiefly iron or lead, poured from a smelting furnace. b. A mold in which such metal is cast. c. Pig iron.  5. Slang: A member of the social or political establishment, especially one holding sexist or racist views. 
 
  
Bodine: In 1905, two years after the Wright brothers powered flight, the Bodine brothers produced their first electric motor for a dental drill manufacturer.http://www.bodine-electric.com/Asp/AboutUs.asp
+
Pigs in ''Gravity's Rainbow'' [http://www.hyperarts.com/pynchon/gravity/extra/pigs.html]
  
 
See terrific ''Bodine'' entry at AtD wiki: [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=ATD_489-524#Page_517  Bodine]
 
See terrific ''Bodine'' entry at AtD wiki: [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=ATD_489-524#Page_517  Bodine]
 
   
 
   
15/8 '''jarhead(s)'''<br>
+
15/8 - '''jarhead(s)'''<br>
 
Marine Corps slang for a Marine, perhaps for the shape of the hat/helmet they wore.
 
Marine Corps slang for a Marine, perhaps for the shape of the hat/helmet they wore.
The term was well-established by the fifties. Answers.com.  
+
The term was well-established by the fifties. Answers.com. Actually, jarhead refers to the high & tight regulation haircut. [https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/jarhead]
  
17/10 '''broad'''<br>
+
16/9 - '''Trumpeter of Cracow'''<br>
slang term for a woman; "a broad is a woman who can throw a mean punch": American Heritage dictionary sample sentence.  
+
This references the St. Mary's Trumpet Call, which is a traditional, five-note Polish bugle call closely bound to the history and traditions of Kraków. It is played every hour on the hour, four times in succession in each of the four cardinal directions, by a trumpeter on the highest tower of the city's Saint Mary's Basilica. The noon performance is broadcast via radio to all of Poland and the world. The five note bugle call is based on the trumpeter in 1241 whose playing of the song was cut off after the 5th note by a Tartar arrow, much like Ms. Beatrice Buffo's playing
 +
"It Came Upon a Midnight Clear" is ended by the rush to "suck hour".[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Mary%27s_Trumpet_Call].
  
17/10 '''"Where we going," Profane said. "The way we're heading," said
+
It is also a reference to a 20th century children's novel titled ''The Trumpeter of Krakow'', which might have been a book read by the men and women who served in WWII and Korea. The story is of a trumpeter who leaves his home to go to Kraków, escaping with a crystal that seems to have alchemist and hypnotic powers. He is given the job of Trumpeter. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Trumpeter_of_Krakow]
 +
 
 +
17/10 - '''"Where we going," Profane said. "The way we're heading," said
 
Pig.'''<br>
 
Pig.'''<br>
 
Notice the tie-in with yo-yoing, immediacy and goallessness. Also notice that Profane's question is presented as a statement and Pig's answer is all part of the same paragraph. (Unlike almost all dialogue in novels.)
 
Notice the tie-in with yo-yoing, immediacy and goallessness. Also notice that Profane's question is presented as a statement and Pig's answer is all part of the same paragraph. (Unlike almost all dialogue in novels.)
  
17/10 '''WAVE lieutenants'''<br>
+
17/10 - '''Newport News'''<br>
WAVES, or "Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service". In the decades since the last of the Yeomen left active duty, only a relatively small corps of Navy Nurses represented their gender in the Naval service, and they had never had formal officer status. Now, the Navy was preparing to accept not just a large number of enlisted women, as it had done during World War I, but female Commissioned Officers to supervise them. It was a development of lasting significance, notwithstanding the WAVES' name, which indicated that they would only be around during the wartime "Emergency". Department of the Navy historical bulletin.
+
Newport News sits across the James River from Norfolk on the northern shore where in 1881, fifteen years of rapid development began under the leadership of Collis P. Huntington, whose new Peninsula Extension of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway from Richmond opened up means of transportation along the Peninsula and provided a new pathway for the railroad to bring West Virginia bituminous coal to port for coastal shipping and worldwide export. This is probably where Morris Teflon works. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newport_News,_Virginia]
  
17/10 '''Morris Teflon'''<br>
+
17/10 - '''WAVE lieutenants'''<br>
Teflon, patented in 1941 and trademarked in 1944 by the Dupont company == Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), a synthetic fluoropolymer which finds numerous applications. PTFE has an extremely low coefficient of friction and is used as a non-stick coating for pans and other cookware. It is very non-reactive, and so is often used in containers and pipework for reactive and corrosive chemicals. Where used as a lubricant, PTFE significantly reduces friction, wear and energy consumption of machinery. Wikipedia.
+
WAVES, or "Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service". In the decades since the last of the Yeomen left active duty, only a relatively small corps of Navy Nurses represented their gender in the Naval service, and they had never had formal officer status. Now, the Navy was preparing to accept not just a large number of enlisted women, as it had done during World War I, but female Commissioned Officers to supervise them. It was a development of lasting significance, notwithstanding the WAVES' name, which indicated that they would only be around during the wartime "Emergency". Department of the Navy historical bulletin. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WAVES]
  
17/10 '''switchman'''<br>
+
17/10 - '''Morris Teflon'''<br>
switchman - a man who operates railroad switches. American Heritage Dictionary. Pynchon does not like railroads. See ''Against the Day''.
+
Teflon, patented in 1941 and trademarked in 1944 by the Dupont company == Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), a synthetic fluoropolymer which finds numerous applications. PTFE has an extremely low coefficient of friction and is used as a non-stick coating for pans and other cookware. It is very non-reactive, and so is often used in containers and pipework for reactive and corrosive chemicals. Where used as a lubricant, PTFE significantly reduces friction, wear and energy consumption of machinery. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polytetrafluoroethylene]
  
18/11 '''clamped down'''<br>
+
The word "teflon" is often used as a pejorative for someone who evades responsibility. While John Gotti, the Teflon Don came much later, he is an example of this.
  
clamp... 
+
17/10 - '''switchman'''<br>
Phrasal Verb:
+
switchman - a man who operates railroad switches. Pynchon does not like railroads. See [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Against the Day''].
clamp down<br>
+
To become more strict or repressive; impose controls: clamping down on environment polluters.
+
  
18/11 '''chipped'''<br>
+
18/11 - '''wire-brushed'''<br>
v. trans. chip (chp)<br>
+
naval slang for a merciless chewing out.
2. a. To break a small piece from: chip a tooth.
+
b. To break or cut off (a small piece): chip ice from the window. American Heritage Dictionary.
+
  
18/11 '''wire-brushed'''<br>
+
18/11 - '''She taught them all a song. Learned from a para on French leave from the fighting in Algeria'''<br />
naval slang for a merciless chewing out: "In ''Flight of the Intruder'', Jake Grafton as a JO gets wire-brushed by his CO for attacking an unfragged target. His boss tells him: “What you did was wrong –dead wrong…America will always need the Navy. And the Navy must obey.” "
+
The song the paratrooper taught Paola is a French anti-war song, "Le D&eacute;serteur" ("The Deserter"), recorded in 1954 by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boris_Vian Boris Vian] and written by Vian and Harold Berg:
  
18/11 '''para on French leave'''<br>
+
:Early tomorrow morning<br />
paratrooper.
+
:I will shut my door<br />
 +
:on these dead years<br />
 +
:I will take to the road.<br />
 +
:I will beg my way along<br />
 +
:on the land and on the waves<br />
 +
:the old and the new world ...
  
18/11 '''Piraeus'''<br>
+
[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYpLHRQV7sQ Have a listen &amp; look]; [http://www.swans.com/library/art7/xxx071.html Lyrics (with a variation)]
Piraeus (Modern Greek: Πειραιάς Pireás, Ancient Greek / Katharevousa: Πειραιεύς Peiraieus) is a city in the periphery of Attica, Greece, located to the south of the city of Athens. It is the capital of the Piraeus Prefecture and belongs to the Athens urban area. It was the port of the ancient city of Athens and it was chosen to serve as the modern port when Athens was re-founded in 1834. Piraeus is the largest port in Europe (and third largest in the world) in terms of passenger transportation.
+
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piraeus
+
  
19/12 '''F.L.N.'''<br>
+
18/11 - '''Piraeus'''<br>
The National Liberation Front (Arabic: جبهة التحرير الوطني; transliterated: Jabhat al-Taḩrīr al-Waţanī, French: Front de Libération nationale, hence FLN) is a socialist political party in Algeria. It was set up on November 1, 1954 as a merger of other smaller groups, to obtain independence for Algeria from France. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Liberation_Front(Algeria)
+
Piraeus is a city in the periphery of Attica, Greece, located to the south of the city of Athens. It is the capital of the Piraeus Prefecture and belongs to the Athens urban area. It was the port of the ancient city of Athens and it was chosen to serve as the modern port when Athens was re-founded in 1834. Piraeus is the largest port in Europe (and third largest in the world) in terms of passenger transportation. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piraeus Wikikpedia]
  
19/12 '''WAVY'''<br>
+
19/12 - '''F.L.N.'''<br />
WAVY is the NBC affiliate serving the Norfolk-Portsmouth-Newport News, Virginia market.  
+
The National Liberation Front (French: ''Front de Libération nationale'', hence FLN) is a socialist political party in Algeria. It was set up on November 1, 1954 as a merger of other smaller groups, to obtain independence for Algeria from France. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Liberation_Front(Algeria) Wikipedia]
  
19/12 '''Pat Boone'''<br>  
+
19/12 - '''Miraculous Medal'''<br>
A very popular 'smooth' singer of the 50s, famous for doing covers of African-American hit songs. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Boone  Pat Boone]
+
The Miraculous Medal is a devotional medal, designed to help the faithful receive grace and to dispose them to cooperate with it. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miraculous_Medal]
  
19/12 '''"No", she said. "Meaning Yes"'''<br>
+
19/12 - '''WAVY'''<br>
Foreshadowing of the chapter 'In which Esther Gets a Nose Job'.
+
WAVY-TV is the NBC affiliate serving the Norfolk-Portsmouth-Newport News, Virginia market. It is not a radio station. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WAVY-TV Wikipedia]
  
19/12 '''Click, went Teflon's Leica'''<br>
+
19/12 - '''Pat Boone'''<br>  
The guy named after a "non-stick surface"--another wonderful Pynchon metaphor, imho-- brings the first use of photography into lifelong picture-taking-hater Pynchon's fictional world. As he shoots
+
A very popular 'smooth' singer of the 50s, famous for doing covers of African-American hit songs. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Boone  Wikipedia]
during that most personal act between two people! <br>
+
We can be reminded that many 'natural' preindustrial societies, the kind Pynchon favors in general, were afraid of the 'soul-stealing' effect
+
of being photographed.<br>
+
Does photography steal the subject's soul?<br>
+
Emre Safak, Oct 08, 2005; 08:26 p.m.<br>
+
"I usually take candid pictures, usually without asking for permission. Usually I have no problem, but once in a while I encounter a person who vehemently objects, claiming that I am stealing their soul. It happened to me recently in the Caribbean island of Bequia, when an old woman covered her face long before I had any idea of taking her picture, and waved me away." From PhotoNet online.
+
  
20/13 '''Navy greatcoat'''<br>
+
19/12 - '''"No", she said. "Meaning Yes"'''<br>
Beautiful pictures from all sides here: [http://cgi.ebay.com/Mid-20th-Century-Royal-Navy-Captains-Greatcoat-VXE_W0QQitemZ110167682561QQihZ001QQcategoryZ586QQrdZ1QQssPageNameZWD2VQQcmdZViewItem#ebayphotohosting  Navy greatcoat]
+
Foreshadowing of the chapter "In which Esther Gets a Nose Job."
  
20/13 '''topside'''<br>
+
19/12 - '''Click, went Teflon's Leica'''<br />
Function: noun<br>
+
Reminds of Pynchon's legendary aversion to being photographed. Although, as the narrator notes, "Outraged privacy was not so important; but the interruption had come just before the Big Moment."
1 plural : the top portion of the outer surface of a ship on each side above the waterline<br>
+
2 : the highest level of authority<br>
+
  
20/13 '''Madonna, he thought'''<br>
+
Leica Camera AG had progressive labor policies which encouraged the retention of skilled workers, many of whom were Jewish. Ernst Leitz II, who began managing the company in 1920, responded to the election of Hitler in 1933 by helping Jews to leave Germany, by "assigning" hundreds (even if they were not actually employees) to overseas sales offices where they were helped to find jobs. The effort intensified after Kristallnacht in 1938, until the borders were closed in September 1939. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leica_Camera]
Madonna is a contraction of an Italian phrase meaning "My Lady".<br>
+
Madonna may refer to:
+
Mary (mother of Jesus), from which all other uses ultimately derive.<br>
+
Madonna (art), a portrait of Mary.<br>
+
Madonna and Child, portraits of Mary and the infant Christ.<br>-- wikipedia
+
  
The Virgin [Mary],(mother of Jesus) is written about at great length by one of Pynchon's self-proclaimed early influences, Henry Adams. He articulated the concept and phrase "The Virgin and the Dynamo". She pervades ''Mont-Saint Michel and Chartes'' by Henry Adams as well. <br>
+
20/13 - '''Navy greatcoat'''<br />
Some think Mary is part of the meaning of the mysterious V.
+
Navy Bridge Coat. This would be an officer's coat, knee-length. The enlisted coat would be called a pea coat and is cut waist-length. See section on coats. Either cut would make Paola a petit woman. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniforms_of_the_United_States_Navy]
  
20/13 '''snow-shroud'''<br>
+
20/13 - '''topside'''<br />
Meaning is obvious, but as two words combined into one noun, the use is archaic. Hyphens are droppped over time in most such combined words [http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2003931097_hyphen07.html  hyphen]
+
the top portion of the outer surface of a ship on each side above the waterline
Merriam-Webster no longer considers it in use. Here it is from a poem in Lippincott's Magazine of 1873 : ..."When snow-shrouds hang on the corpse-cold trees, When sharp frosts sting..."
+
[http://www.gutenberg.org/files/22402/22402.txt  Lippincott's Magazine] <br>
+
One might note this as an early use of an 'archaic' meaning, which uses grew in Pynchon's later work.
+
  
<div id="inanimate"> 20/13 - '''inanimate'''</div>
+
20/13 - '''Madonna, he thought'''<br>
52 uses of the word inanimate in ''V.''; 13 of animate. Thematic: Life vs. Non-Life/Death. Notice bar, the Sailor's Grave and ship, the U.S.S. Scaffold vs. the Impulsive (a mine sweeper)--LOL.
+
aka Mother Mary, aka the Virgin Mary, used blasphemously.
  
21/14 '''turn a corner in the street'''...'''where nothing else lived but himself'''<br>
+
20/13 - '''roads'''<br>
 +
A sheltered body of water where vessels can safely anchor.  Often an estuary on the approaches to a port. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roadstead]
 +
 
 +
<div id="inanimate">20/13 - '''inanimate'''</div>
 +
52 uses of the word inanimate in ''V.''; 13 of animate. Thematic: Life vs. Non-Life/Death.
 +
 
 +
21/14 - '''turn a corner in the street'''...'''where nothing else lived but himself'''<br>
 
As Benny did "rounding the corner' onto East Main [p.2]. Cf. animate/inanimate above.
 
As Benny did "rounding the corner' onto East Main [p.2]. Cf. animate/inanimate above.
  
21/14 '''mental eye'''<br>
+
21/14 - '''mental eye'''<br>
 
Consciousness, of course; also a perceptual theory. A-and here is a use by Charles Dickens:  "gilding with refulgent light our dreamy moments, and laying open a new and magic world before the mental eye, the drama is gone, perfectly gone,' said Mr Curdle." from ''The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickelby''.
 
Consciousness, of course; also a perceptual theory. A-and here is a use by Charles Dickens:  "gilding with refulgent light our dreamy moments, and laying open a new and magic world before the mental eye, the drama is gone, perfectly gone,' said Mr Curdle." from ''The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickelby''.
  
Line 268: Line 254:
  
 
Cf. '''Third eye''':The third eye (also known as the inner eye) is a metaphysical and esoteric concept referring in part to the ajna (brow) chakra in certain Eastern and Western spiritual traditions. It is also spoken of as the gate that leads within to inner realms and spaces of higher consciousness. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_eye  Third eye]
 
Cf. '''Third eye''':The third eye (also known as the inner eye) is a metaphysical and esoteric concept referring in part to the ajna (brow) chakra in certain Eastern and Western spiritual traditions. It is also spoken of as the gate that leads within to inner realms and spaces of higher consciousness. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_eye  Third eye]
Cf. third eye in ''Against the Day'', page 125 [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=ATD_119-148  Against the Day]
+
Cf. third eye in [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=ATD_119-148  ''Against the Day'', p. 125]
  
21/14 '''''Susanna Squaducci'', an Italian luxury liner'''<br>  
+
21/14 - '''''Susanna Squaducci'', an Italian luxury liner'''<br>  
 
Ex-''Scaffold'' sailors hold their 'reunion' here. See Pynchon's later
 
Ex-''Scaffold'' sailors hold their 'reunion' here. See Pynchon's later
'linking' of a military ship and a luxury liner, the ''Stupendica'', in ''Against the Day''.<br>
+
'linking' of a military ship and a luxury liner, the ''Stupendica'', in [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/  ''Against the Day'']
Susanna: name of a young woman who is the subject of a famous Biblical story
+
 
in the ''Book of Daniel''. Known as 'Susanna and/among the Elders', Susanna is viewed bathing by a group of elders and they attempt to blackmail her into performing sexual favors. There have been paintings and a poem by Wallace Stevens.  [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susanna_%28Book_of_Daniel%29  Susanna]<br>
+
:Susanna: name of a young woman who is the subject of a famous Biblical story
Squaducci: need an expert in Italian slang perhaps, but a related word seems to be: sgualdrina f. (pejorative) trollop, strumpet, harlot, tart. Squa(l)might add the negative meaning to whatever 'ducci' [pl. of duchess?] means, since 'drina' can be a girl's name and, in fact, was what young Queen Victoria was called. See ''Queen Victoria'' by Lytton Strachey.
+
in the ''Book of Daniel''. Known as 'Susanna and/among the Elders', Susanna is viewed bathing by a group of elders and they attempt to blackmail her into performing sexual favors. There have been paintings and a poem by Wallace Stevens.  [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susanna_%28Book_of_Daniel%29  Wikipedia]
 +
 
 +
:Squaducci: need an expert in Italian slang perhaps, but a related word seems to be: sgualdrina f. (pejorative) trollop, strumpet, harlot, tart. Squa(l)might add the negative meaning to whatever 'ducci' [pl. of duchess?] means, since 'drina' can be a girl's name and, in fact, was what young Queen Victoria was called. See ''Queen Victoria'' by Lytton Strachey.
  
 
Somehow the meanings seem to fit Pynchonian themes: from the sound, to the  
 
Somehow the meanings seem to fit Pynchonian themes: from the sound, to the  
 
Biblical sexual allusion (of saved purity) reduced to lack of such purity.
 
Biblical sexual allusion (of saved purity) reduced to lack of such purity.
  
21/14 '''dancing the dirty boogie'''<br>
+
21/14 - '''dancing the dirty boogie'''<br>
a voluptuous dance (with varying lyrics) originating within the African-American tradition.<br>
+
a voluptuous dance (with varying lyrics) originating within the African-American tradition. "The “Dirty Boogie,” which was made famous by another film, “Dirty Dancing.” As you may recall, this film takes place in the 1960’s in a small Catskill resort where a dance instructor taught a young seventeen year-old varius types of sexy dance moves: one being the “Dirty Boogie.” Of course there was a scene in the movie showing all the teenagers and young adults doing the “Dirty Boogie.” Many of the dance moves in the “Dirty Boogie,” resembled movements featured in the movie, “Lambada.” These movements were acting out sexual pleasure on the dance floor. The Rolling Stones do a "Dirty Boogie" on their ''Black & Blue'' album.
"The “Dirty Boogie,” which was made famous by another film, “Dirty Dancing.” As you may recall, this film takes place in the 1960’s in a small Catskill resort where a dance instructor taught a young seventeen year-old varius types of sexy dance moves: one being the “Dirty Boogie.” Of course there was a scene in the movie showing all the teenagers and young adults doing the “Dirty Boogie.” Many of the dance moves in the “Dirty Boogie,” resembled movements featured in the movie, “Lambada.” These movements were acting out sexual pleasure on the dance floor.
+
 
''The Rolling Stones'' do a "Dirty Boogie" on their ''Black & Blue'' album.
+
21/15 - '''clown's motley'''<br>
 +
Motley refers to the traditional costume of the Court jester or the Harlequin character in ''Commedia dell'arte''.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motley]
 +
 
 +
22/15 - '''Rachel Owlglass'''<br>
 +
"Rachel" means "ewe" in Hebrew; the name of Jacob's wife, who, after long infertility, gave birth to Joseph. Jacob was tricked by her father into working for him for 7 years only to be given Leah instead of Rachel. He agreed to 7 more years of labor to have Rachel too. Ahh polygamy! She dies giving birth to Benjamin. [https://www.britannica.com/biography/Rachel-biblical-figure]  "Owlglass" is the Anglicization of "Eulenspiegel"; Till Eulenspiegel was a trickster/fool in German folklore and protagonist of "Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks", a tone poem by Richard Wagner.  "Eule"="owl", "Spiegel"="mirror". [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Till_Eulenspiegel%27s_Merry_Pranks]
 +
 
 +
22/15 - '''the Catskills'''<br>
 +
Catskill Mountains, an area northwest of New York City, famous as a vacation resort area. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catskill_Mountains  Wikipedia].
  
22/15 '''clown's motley'''<br>
+
22/15 - '''shakedown cruise'''<br>
Motley refers to the traditional costume of the Court jester or the Harlequin character in Commedia dell'arte.
+
Shakedown cruise is a nautical term in which the performance of a ship is tested. Shakedown cruises are also used to familiarize the ship's crew with operation of the craft. The term can also refer in a generic sense to the process of testing out any new technology or systems. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakedown_cruise]
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motley]
+
  
22/15 '''back in '54, this MG'''<br>
+
22/15 - '''gee and haw'''<br>
MG TF<br>
+
To haw and gee &#151; To haw and gee about, to go from one thing to another without good reason; to have no settled purpose; to be irresolute or unstable. [Colloq.]  Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, 1913.
Production 1953-1955<br>
+
9600<br>
+
Body style(s) 2-door roadster<br>
+
Engine(s) 1250 cc XPAG type Straight-4<br>
+
1466 cc XPEG type Straight-4<br>
+
Length 147 inches (3734 mm)<br>
+
Width 60 inches (1518 mm)<br>
+
Essentially a stop gap car until the new range starting with the MGA could be produced, the TF launched in 1953 was a facelifted TD with a sloping grille and the headlights in the wings. The external radiator cap was now a dummy as a pressurised system was fitted to better cope with hot climates.<br>
+
In 1954 the engine was re-designated XPEG and enlarged to 1466 cc by increasing the bore to 72 mm giving 63 bhp at 5500 rpm and the car designated the TF 1500. [http://enwikipedia.org.MG MG]
+
  
 +
The phrase derives from "Hey and Go" - turn right and turn left, and was originally used in leading oxen and cattle by teamsters.[http://www.takeourword.com/TOW144/page2.html]
 +
                         
 
<div id="trocadero">22/15 - '''Schlozhauer's Trocadero'''</div>
 
<div id="trocadero">22/15 - '''Schlozhauer's Trocadero'''</div>
 
The word ''trocadero'', which in Spanish means "place of barter" (from trocar: "to barter"), goes back to a fortified site near Cadiz, Spain, that was the stronghold of the Constititutionalists in the revolution of 1820 and that fell to the French in 1823. During the International Exhibition of 1878 an ornate palace was built to commemorate the French victory. "Trocadero" became a popular name for public places in Europe, one being the Trocadero Palace of Varieties in London, known as "The Troc," which opened as a music hall in 1882 on the corner of Shaftsbury Avenue and Windmill Street.
 
The word ''trocadero'', which in Spanish means "place of barter" (from trocar: "to barter"), goes back to a fortified site near Cadiz, Spain, that was the stronghold of the Constititutionalists in the revolution of 1820 and that fell to the French in 1823. During the International Exhibition of 1878 an ornate palace was built to commemorate the French victory. "Trocadero" became a popular name for public places in Europe, one being the Trocadero Palace of Varieties in London, known as "The Troc," which opened as a music hall in 1882 on the corner of Shaftsbury Avenue and Windmill Street.
  
<div id="bravo">27/21 - '''a pimpled bravo'''</div>
+
22/15 - '''Liberty'''<br />
A "bravo" is a villain, desperado; esp. a hired assassin
+
Liberty, New York: [http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=41.797792,-74.742829&spn=0.10,0.10 Google Map]
  
37/32 - '''horniness'''<br>
+
22/15 - '''Da Conho''' translates from Brazilian Portuguese as "from/of I know" according to Google and Bing translate, which matches the description on 23/16 that he "knew no more than that he was a Zionist, suffered was confused, was daft to stand rooted sock-top deep in the loam of any kibbutz".  
a state of sexual excitement. OED<br>
+
Pynchon is the first citation in the OED for use of this word in print in ''V.''.
+
  
<div id="Zeitsuss">43/39 -'''Zeitsuss'''</div>  
+
22/15 - '''fight Arabs in Israel'''<br />
'Zeit' [German] = Time.<br>
+
Of the 950,000 estimated Arabs in Israel before Israel became a state in 1948, an estimated 156,000 remained after. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arab_citizens_of_Israel Wikipedia]
'Suss':  
+
Pronunciation: 's&s<br>
+
Function: transitive verb<br>
+
Etymology: by shortening & alteration from suspect<br>
+
1 chiefly British : FIGURE OUT -- usually used with out<br>
+
2 chiefly British : to inspect or investigate so as to gain more knowledge -- usually used with out. Merriam-Webster<br>
+
  
Australian variant, 'suss' alone without 'suss out':1. suspicious; distrustful; eg, "I'm a bit suss about him and his actions". 2. deceitful; underhanded; clandestine. No OED to check if variant dates to 1960s.
+
23/16 - '''Parris Island'''<br>
 +
Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island is an 8,095 acre (32.9 km²) military installation near Beaufort, South Carolina, tasked with the training of enlisted Marines. Male recruits living east of the Mississippi River and female recruits from all over the USA report here to receive their initial training. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parris_Island Wikipedia]
  
 +
23/16 - '''Haganah'''<br>
 +
The Haganah (Hebrew: "The Defense") was a Jewish paramilitary organization in what was then the British Mandate of Palestine from 1920 to 1948. This paramilitary became the core of the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) that would have been what Da Conho would have joined to fight the Arabs. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haganah  Wikipedia]
  
 +
23/16 - '''mezuzah'''<br>
 +
A mezuzah (Hebrew: "doorpost") is a piece of parchment (usually contained in a decorative case) inscribed with specified Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4-9 and 11:13-21). These verses comprise the Jewish prayer "Shema Yisrael," and begin with the phrase "Hear, O Israel, the Lord your God, the Lord is One." [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mezuzah Wikipedia]
  
 +
23/16 - '''iceberg lettuce'''<br>
 +
The Iceberg lettuce industry exploded during WWII as salads were seen as a real morale booster. After the war, its popularity continued as soldiers came home wanting the same assortment of fresh produce procured by the military. [http://www.taproduce.com/About/PressReleases07-4.html] California producers of iceberg lettuce were the targets of protests by Cesar Chavez's National Farm Workers Association, beginning in the very early sixties.
  
 +
23/16 - '''watercress'''<br />
 +
The capital growing city of this leaf vegetable ''was'' Huntsville, Alabama until:
 +
:"The city's transformation began with the arrival of Wernher von Braun, Hitler's chief missile designer, whose V-2 rocket terrorized London and other British cities. An SS major who headed rocket research at the Peenemunde complex, where slave laborers were starved, beaten, and worked to death, von Braun could have ended up in the docket at Nuremberg like other leading Nazis. But at war's end, the Pentagon was anxious to plumb German scientific know-how in order to improve America's weaponry. Under the top-secret Operation Paperclip, the Army smuggled von Braun and his team of 118 Peenemunde scientists out of Germany and brought them to the United States. After first going to a military base near El Paso, they were taken to Huntsville in 1950 and put to work at Redstone Arsenal." [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huntsville%2C_Alabama]
  
 +
23/16 - '''Belgian Endive'''<br>
 +
A leaf vegetable grown completely underground or indoors in the absence of sunlight, a process that prevents the leaves from turning green and opening up. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicory#Cultivated]
  
 +
23/16 - '''Abdul Sayid'''<br>
 +
Abdul (also transliterated Abdel, `Abd al-, and other ways) means "servant of the", and is the first part of many Arabic names. It is combined with one of the 99 Names of God in the Qur'an to form a two-word Arabic theophoric name. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul] ''Sayid'' or ''Sayyid'' is an honorific title given to males who are thereby said to be descendants of the prophet Muhammed, founder of Islam.
  
 +
24/17 - '''pedestrian girls'''<br>
 +
notice double meaning.
 +
 +
The 1913 edition of ''Webster's Dictionary'' seems to be, from this and other citations, one of Pynchon's major linguistic resources or, at least, gives some of the most resonant meanings from a Pynchon Perspective.
 +
 +
24/7 - '''drained-nervous'''<br>
 +
With the hyphen, this shows another older archaic usage. Cf. Snow-shroud and the loss of hyphens between words above.
 +
 +
<div id="bravo">27/21 - '''a pimpled bravo'''</div>
 +
A "bravo" is a villain, desperado; esp. a hired assassin
 +
 +
32/26 - '''Dewey, now astride a lifeline on the bridge, gave a bass string intro and began to sing Blue Suede Shoes, after Elvis Presley.'''<br />
 +
A slight anachronism. We know the date is 1st January 1956. Carl Perkins wrote [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Suede_Shoes "Blues Suede Shoes"] in on 4/5 December 1955, and released the record on 1st January 1956. Elvis recorded it on 30th January 1956 and first played it on television on the 11th February. It was the first track on his first album, released March. So Dewey couldn’t have played "Blue Suede Shoes" after Elvis Presley.
 +
 +
An anachronism, but "after" here means "in the manner of".
 +
 +
37/32 - '''horniness'''<br>
 +
a state of sexual excitement. Pynchon is the first citation in the ''Oxford English Dictionary'' for use of this word in print, in ''V.''.
 +
 +
39/34 - '''screw where his navel should have been...'''<br />
 +
The navel is where the umbilical cord attaches. When the boy unscrews it, his body falls apart. This is a repeated reference that bodily traits are passed on through genetics and the umbilical cord attaches you to a parent. If you try to undo it, you will undo yourself.
 +
 +
41/37 - '''Luis Aparicio'''<br>
 +
Venezuelan major-league baseball player; American League Rookie of the year in 1956, playing for the Chicago White Sox.
 +
 +
42/38 - '''Geronimo broke off the song to say “Coño” and wobble his fingers.'''<br />
 +
"Coño" is Spanish for "cunt"
 +
 +
43/39 - '''now [the alligators] moved big, blind albino, all over the sewer system...'''<br />
 +
The urban legend of alligators living in the sewers of New York was given the some credence when, in the 1950s, Edward P. "Teddy" May, the superintendent of sewers in New York City, went down into the sewers to investigate and told a journalist that he'd seen "Alligators serenely paddling around in his sewers. The beam of his own flashlight had spotlighted alligators whose length, on the average, was about two feet. Some may have been longer." (''The World Beneath The City'', Robert Daley, 1959). However, Mr. May's credibility has been questioned and, in truth, the sewers are an environment inhospitable to alligators or caimons, and reports of their subterranean existence have been greatly exaggerated. [http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/11/23/the-book-behind-the-sewer-alligator-legend/ ''New York Times'' article about this...]
 +
: However, a Nile crocodile was captured in the sewers of Paris, albeit in 1984, after the book was published. See for example [https://www.ouest-france.fr/bretagne/vannes-56000/lhistoire-le-croco-des-egouts-de-paris-flemmarde-vannes-2759140 this article] or [https://www.francetvinfo.fr/decouverte/bizarre/video-y-a-t-il-un-crocodile-dans-les-egouts-de-paris_385997.html this one].
 +
 +
<div id="Zeitsuss">43/39 -'''Zeitsuss'''</div>
 +
'Zeit' [German] = Time. "suss" = Sweet. Mr. Zeitsuss is head of the Alligator Patrol.
  
  
 
{{V PbP}}
 
{{V PbP}}

Latest revision as of 00:37, 4 April 2024

Please keep these annotations SPOILER-FREE by not revealing information from later pages in the novel.
492-page edition / 547-page edition

9/1 - Benny Profane
Benny: Benny is slang for benzedrine, a trademarked amphetamine often prescribed for anxiety. [1]. Also, bene [Latin] = "well-intentioned", observes Molly Hite, "The structural metaphor for the 'present' seems to be Profane's habit of yo-yoing, and the well-intentioned (bene) Benny himself". The complete quote can be found in the discussion, as it has a spoiler. The "present" in the novel refers to this and other chapters that happen between Christmas Eve, 1955-1956. The book citation is in the discussion. The book has an interesting interpretation of Pynchon's post-modernist narrative.

Profane: Since 1912, as defined in The Elementary Forms of Religious Life by the sociologist Emile Durkheim, 'profane' has had the social meaning of 'everything that is not sacred'. [2]
"The division of the world into two domains, one containing all that is sacred and the other all that is profane—such is the distinctive trait of religious thought."--Durkheim (p. 34). [3]
Latin root: pro "in front of/before"; fanum "temple", i.e. not within the inner sanctum. Benny is "profane" compared to the almost mystical world of historical fiction Stencil (see below) moves through.

9/1 - Schlemihl
A loser or fool; one who is clumsy or hurts others emotionally. [4] The different spelling from the more traditional schlemiel alludes to a novel by Adelbert von Chamisso titled Peter Schlemihl, which tells the story of a man who sells his shadow to the Devil for a "bottomless wallet" only to find that his missing shadow occludes him from society and the woman he loves. He rejects another offer from the Devil to exchange his shadow for his soul and travels the earth in scientific pursuit. A 1953 television version appeared in "Favorite Story" starring DeForest Kelley, aka Dr. McCoy of the Starship Enterprise. [5]

9/1 - Christmas Eve 1955
The first time that the Continental Air Defense Command (CONAD) received a call concerning Santa's whereabouts. [6]
Pynchon worked on aspects of NORAD [later acronym] when he was at Boeing.

9/1 - Norfolk, Virginia
Port city.wikipedia The city has a long history as a strategic military and transportation point. Norfolk is home to the Norfolk Naval Base, the world's largest naval base. Urban renewal, starting in the 1970s included the demolition of many prominent city buildings, and large swaths of urban fabric including the East Main Street district (where the current civic complex is located), and where Benny starts yo-yoing.

9/1 - his old tin can's
His particular naval ship. The informal usage of "tin can" refers to a naval destroyer, notorious for relatively light armor.

9/1 - Sailor's Grave
Profane's destoyer, the USS Scaffold, considered this tavern theirs. The name of the tavern comes from a poem written by Edwin Hubbell Chapin and set to music by George N. Allen. [7] It is also known as "The Ocean Burial". [8] Chapin later reworked the poem into a cowboy lament called "Bury me not on the Lone Prairie" which has been covered by many C&W artists including Johnny Cash and Moe Bandy and more recently by The Residents. [9]

9/1 - Sterno can
Sterno Canned Heat is a fuel made from denatured and jellied alcohol. It is designed to be burned directly from its can.wikipedia

9/1 - Chief Yeoman
A chief yeoman (E-7) would be in charge of administrative and logistical duties aboard a destroyer during WWII. Yeoman is one of the oldest rates in the Navy. [10]

1954 Packard Patrician
9/1 - 54 Packard Patrician

The Packard Patrician was an automobile built by the Studebaker-Packard Corporation of Detroit, Michigan, from model years 1951 through the 1956 model. There was even an eight-passenger model.1958 was the last year of Packard production. The Packard had a high reputation for quality, for value that would last and Packards are highly-prized by collectors today. [11]

10/2 - seaman deuce
A seaman apprentice [seaman second class].

10/2 - like a yo-yo...maybe a year and a half
"One year of those times [Fifties] was much like another...there was a lot of aimlessness going around". Introduction to Slow Learner, p.14, by Thomas Pynchon.

10/2 - Drunken Sailors...Do With
Lyrics to a sea shanty: "What shall we DO WITH a DRUNKEN SAILOR?"

Here, actually beginning on the first page, appears Pynchon's lifelong stylistic use of capitalization--for a certain kind of emphasis?, for a kind of reification?, and for much, much more certainly. It also has to do with Pynchon's preoccupation with Germanic history--in German, all nouns are capitalized. See Pynchon's 1997 novel, Mason & Dixon for the most extensive use of capitalization.

10/2 - one potential berserk...the glass breaks?
Cf. Zoyd Wheeler's annual "act of televised insanity" in Pynchon's 1990 novel, Vineland

10/2 - SP
Shore Patrol, the naval 'police'.

10/2 - Hey Rube
Carnies'--circus folk--call to come together when in a dispute with townspeople. Reviewer, writer, Michael Moorcock, who published an early Pynchon story when he was a young magazine editor, has pointed to circuses as motifs in Pynchon, calling Against the Day, a massive "circus" novel.

10/2 - V
This is the first appearance of the letter that is the title. It describes ugly green mercury-vapor lamps. Not positive associations--to say the least-- in Pynchon's world. See Against the Day, passim, especially in the Telluride sections. The V of the lamps recedes to the east, usually a positive association in Pynchon, especially in intellectual connotations.

10/2 - doggo
in hiding — used chiefly in the phrase to lie doggo

11/3 - Beatrice
Probable allusion — see 'all barmaids' coming up — to Beatrice, [Beatrice Poltinari] guide through 'Paradise' of Dante's The Divine Comedy, whom Dante loves.

11/3 - DesDiv 22
Destroyer Division 22. Possible allusion to Catch 22 ?, another now-classic comic, famously anti-war, novel, published in 1961, but sections were published even earlier in magazines.

11/3 - single up all lines

"Single up all lines" is a common nautical term. Ships are docked with lines doubled -- that is, with two sets of ropes or chains holding the vessel to the dock. To "single up all lines" is to remove the redundant second lines in preparation to make way. This phrase, used as either a nautical term or metaphorically appears in The Crying of Lot 49, p.31; Gravity's Rainbow, p.489; Mason & Dixon, pp.258 and 260; Against the Day, p.3; and Inherent Vice, p. 119.

11/3 - N.O.B.
Naval Operations Base.
On 17 September, 1943, an accident occurred which bears a lot of resemblance to the potential accidents Pynchon describes in "Togetherness," written while at Boeing: "A NAS [Naval Station] ordnance department truck was pulling four trailers loaded with depth charges on the taxiway between NAS and the NOB piers. Each trailer was designed to carry four aerial depth charges. To save time, two additional charges were loaded on top of each trailer. Compounding the problem, the charges on top were not properly chained down. One of the charges slipped loose and became wedged between the trailer and the ground. The friction of being dragged against the road caused the charge to begin smoking." Wikipedia

11/3 - Ploy
'ploi'..Function: noun
Etymology: probably from employ..Date: 1722
1 : ESCAPADE, FROLIC
2 a : a tactic intended to embarrass or frustrate an opponent b : a devised or contrived move : STRATAGEM (a ploy to get her to open the door -- Robert B. Parker)

11/3 - Pentothal injection
Known as truth serum. Wikipedia

12/4 - Negro
Negro is a racial term applied to people of Sub Saharan African origin; The word is now largely seen as archaic, usually neutral and, depending on the user, occasionally offensive. However, prior to the shift in the "lexicon" of American and worldwide classification of race and ethnicity in the late 1960s, the appellation was accepted as a normal formal term both by those of African descent as well as non-blacks. Negro means black in Spanish and Portuguese, and the Italian nero is similar (Latin: niger = "black"). Wikipedia
V. is early sixties, before the word shift in the late sixties.

12/4 - Dahoud
"Dahoud" is the Arabic name for David. Name of an inquisitive youth who tended to the camels in El-Jaziri. [?]

12/4 - "life is the most precious possession you have?"..."without it, you'd be dead."
The 'meaning' of life reduced to this? Somehow seems akin to Profane's yo-yoing, or later randomness. Satire of existentialism?

12/4 - Lights Out
lights out at 2200 (10:00 PM)---Navy Boot Camp.

12/4 - snipes A snipe is naval slang for a member of the engineering crew on a ship. Historically, there was always tension between snipes and the deck crew. http://oldsnipe.com/SnipeBegin.html

12/4 - bastard file
Mill Files (Bastard Cut) are two-sided flat files featuring a single bastard cut pattern as well as a rectangular tapered point for detail work (Two square edges). Bastard cut is a term used to describe the coarseness of the file. A Bastard cut file will be between the coarsest and second cut meaning the teeth are quite coarse and ideal for rapid material removal while still leaving a smooth finish. The Single Cut means that the file has one set of diagonal rows of teeth. [12]

12/4 - DesLant
Destroyer Force, Atlantic Fleet. Established in February 1941. [13]

13/5 - Mrs. Buffo...also named Beatrice
A basso buffo, a comic bass, a staple of nearly every classic Italian comic opera. [14]

13/5 - dragon-embroidered kimono
The Kimono (着物, Kimono? literally "something worn", i.e., "clothes") is the national costume of Japan. Originally kimono indicated all types of clothing, but it has come to mean specifically the full-length traditional garment worn by women, men, and children. Kimonos are T-shaped, straight-lined robes that fall to the ankle, with collars and full-length sleeves. The sleeves are commonly very wide at the wrist, as much as a half meter. Traditionally, on special occasions unmarried women wear kimonos (furisode) with extremely long sleeves that extend almost to the floor. Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimonos
Kimonos were originally worn only by the nobility.

After World War II, as Japan's economy gradually recovered, kimono became even more affordable and were produced in greater quantities. Europe and America fashion ideas affected the kimono designs and motifs. japanesekimono http://www.japanesekimono.com/kimono_history.htm

13/5 - Seventh Fleet
The United States 7th Fleet is a naval military formation based in Yokosuka, Japan, with units positioned near South Korea and Japan. [15]

13/5 - Dewey Gland
Spelled "Dewy", it means moist, wet--from dew. "Dewy-eyed" means innocent, naive.-M-W Dictionary. Musicians, often guitar and ukelele players, are positive characters in Pynchon's oeuvre. Since music is a great joy in Pynchon's world, musicians seem often to be his archetypal artist figures. See, as context, the myth of Orpheus,"the music of [whose] lyre was so beautiful that when he played, wild beasts were soothed, trees danced, and rivers stood still." [16]

14/6 - goat hole
The goat is the naval mascot.
Goat Locker - Chiefs' Quarters and Mess. The term originated during the era of wooden ships, when Chiefs were given charge of the milk goats on board. Nowadays more a term of respect for the age of its denizens.

14/6 - wardroom
wardroom n : military quarters for dining and recreation for officers of a warship. [17]

14/6 - X.O.
Executive Officer. 2nd in command to the Captain.

14/6 - Pappy Hod
pap·py2 (păp'ē) n. Informal., pl. -pies.--- Father
Of or resembling pap; mushy.

hod n. A trough carried over the shoulder for transporting loads, as of bricks or mortar. A coal scuttle. [18]

14/6 - boatswain
n : a petty officer on a merchant ship who controls the work of other seamen ... [19] More commonly written [and pronounced as] "bosun".

14/6 - riggish
wanton: said of Cleopatra whom the holy priests praise when she is riggish' (i.e. wanton) ... Anthony & Cleopatra, Shakespeare.

14/6 - Pig Bodine
Notice immaturity and other relevant meanings to simple 'pig' 1 a : a young domesticated swine not yet sexually mature; broadly : a wild or domestic swine. 3 : a dirty, gluttonous, or repulsive person.--Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Pigs in Gravity's Rainbow [20]

See terrific Bodine entry at AtD wiki: Bodine

15/8 - jarhead(s)
Marine Corps slang for a Marine, perhaps for the shape of the hat/helmet they wore. The term was well-established by the fifties. Answers.com. Actually, jarhead refers to the high & tight regulation haircut. [21]

16/9 - Trumpeter of Cracow
This references the St. Mary's Trumpet Call, which is a traditional, five-note Polish bugle call closely bound to the history and traditions of Kraków. It is played every hour on the hour, four times in succession in each of the four cardinal directions, by a trumpeter on the highest tower of the city's Saint Mary's Basilica. The noon performance is broadcast via radio to all of Poland and the world. The five note bugle call is based on the trumpeter in 1241 whose playing of the song was cut off after the 5th note by a Tartar arrow, much like Ms. Beatrice Buffo's playing "It Came Upon a Midnight Clear" is ended by the rush to "suck hour".[22].

It is also a reference to a 20th century children's novel titled The Trumpeter of Krakow, which might have been a book read by the men and women who served in WWII and Korea. The story is of a trumpeter who leaves his home to go to Kraków, escaping with a crystal that seems to have alchemist and hypnotic powers. He is given the job of Trumpeter. [23]

17/10 - "Where we going," Profane said. "The way we're heading," said Pig.
Notice the tie-in with yo-yoing, immediacy and goallessness. Also notice that Profane's question is presented as a statement and Pig's answer is all part of the same paragraph. (Unlike almost all dialogue in novels.)

17/10 - Newport News
Newport News sits across the James River from Norfolk on the northern shore where in 1881, fifteen years of rapid development began under the leadership of Collis P. Huntington, whose new Peninsula Extension of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway from Richmond opened up means of transportation along the Peninsula and provided a new pathway for the railroad to bring West Virginia bituminous coal to port for coastal shipping and worldwide export. This is probably where Morris Teflon works. [24]

17/10 - WAVE lieutenants
WAVES, or "Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service". In the decades since the last of the Yeomen left active duty, only a relatively small corps of Navy Nurses represented their gender in the Naval service, and they had never had formal officer status. Now, the Navy was preparing to accept not just a large number of enlisted women, as it had done during World War I, but female Commissioned Officers to supervise them. It was a development of lasting significance, notwithstanding the WAVES' name, which indicated that they would only be around during the wartime "Emergency". Department of the Navy historical bulletin. [25]

17/10 - Morris Teflon
Teflon, patented in 1941 and trademarked in 1944 by the Dupont company == Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), a synthetic fluoropolymer which finds numerous applications. PTFE has an extremely low coefficient of friction and is used as a non-stick coating for pans and other cookware. It is very non-reactive, and so is often used in containers and pipework for reactive and corrosive chemicals. Where used as a lubricant, PTFE significantly reduces friction, wear and energy consumption of machinery. [26]

The word "teflon" is often used as a pejorative for someone who evades responsibility. While John Gotti, the Teflon Don came much later, he is an example of this.

17/10 - switchman
switchman - a man who operates railroad switches. Pynchon does not like railroads. See Against the Day.

18/11 - wire-brushed
naval slang for a merciless chewing out.

18/11 - She taught them all a song. Learned from a para on French leave from the fighting in Algeria
The song the paratrooper taught Paola is a French anti-war song, "Le Déserteur" ("The Deserter"), recorded in 1954 by Boris Vian and written by Vian and Harold Berg:

Early tomorrow morning
I will shut my door
on these dead years
I will take to the road.
I will beg my way along
on the land and on the waves
the old and the new world ...

Have a listen & look; Lyrics (with a variation)

18/11 - Piraeus
Piraeus is a city in the periphery of Attica, Greece, located to the south of the city of Athens. It is the capital of the Piraeus Prefecture and belongs to the Athens urban area. It was the port of the ancient city of Athens and it was chosen to serve as the modern port when Athens was re-founded in 1834. Piraeus is the largest port in Europe (and third largest in the world) in terms of passenger transportation. Wikikpedia

19/12 - F.L.N.
The National Liberation Front (French: Front de Libération nationale, hence FLN) is a socialist political party in Algeria. It was set up on November 1, 1954 as a merger of other smaller groups, to obtain independence for Algeria from France. Wikipedia

19/12 - Miraculous Medal
The Miraculous Medal is a devotional medal, designed to help the faithful receive grace and to dispose them to cooperate with it. [27]

19/12 - WAVY
WAVY-TV is the NBC affiliate serving the Norfolk-Portsmouth-Newport News, Virginia market. It is not a radio station. Wikipedia

19/12 - Pat Boone
A very popular 'smooth' singer of the 50s, famous for doing covers of African-American hit songs. Wikipedia

19/12 - "No", she said. "Meaning Yes"
Foreshadowing of the chapter "In which Esther Gets a Nose Job."

19/12 - Click, went Teflon's Leica
Reminds of Pynchon's legendary aversion to being photographed. Although, as the narrator notes, "Outraged privacy was not so important; but the interruption had come just before the Big Moment."

Leica Camera AG had progressive labor policies which encouraged the retention of skilled workers, many of whom were Jewish. Ernst Leitz II, who began managing the company in 1920, responded to the election of Hitler in 1933 by helping Jews to leave Germany, by "assigning" hundreds (even if they were not actually employees) to overseas sales offices where they were helped to find jobs. The effort intensified after Kristallnacht in 1938, until the borders were closed in September 1939. [28]

20/13 - Navy greatcoat
Navy Bridge Coat. This would be an officer's coat, knee-length. The enlisted coat would be called a pea coat and is cut waist-length. See section on coats. Either cut would make Paola a petit woman. [29]

20/13 - topside
the top portion of the outer surface of a ship on each side above the waterline

20/13 - Madonna, he thought
aka Mother Mary, aka the Virgin Mary, used blasphemously.

20/13 - roads
A sheltered body of water where vessels can safely anchor. Often an estuary on the approaches to a port. [30]

20/13 - inanimate

52 uses of the word inanimate in V.; 13 of animate. Thematic: Life vs. Non-Life/Death.

21/14 - turn a corner in the street...where nothing else lived but himself
As Benny did "rounding the corner' onto East Main [p.2]. Cf. animate/inanimate above.

21/14 - mental eye
Consciousness, of course; also a perceptual theory. A-and here is a use by Charles Dickens: "gilding with refulgent light our dreamy moments, and laying open a new and magic world before the mental eye, the drama is gone, perfectly gone,' said Mr Curdle." from The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickelby.

Further reading again indicates that "mental eye" is an older use which has faded, being largely replaced by 'mind's eye".

Cf. Third eye:The third eye (also known as the inner eye) is a metaphysical and esoteric concept referring in part to the ajna (brow) chakra in certain Eastern and Western spiritual traditions. It is also spoken of as the gate that leads within to inner realms and spaces of higher consciousness. Third eye Cf. third eye in Against the Day, p. 125

21/14 - Susanna Squaducci, an Italian luxury liner
Ex-Scaffold sailors hold their 'reunion' here. See Pynchon's later 'linking' of a military ship and a luxury liner, the Stupendica, in Against the Day

Susanna: name of a young woman who is the subject of a famous Biblical story

in the Book of Daniel. Known as 'Susanna and/among the Elders', Susanna is viewed bathing by a group of elders and they attempt to blackmail her into performing sexual favors. There have been paintings and a poem by Wallace Stevens. Wikipedia

Squaducci: need an expert in Italian slang perhaps, but a related word seems to be: sgualdrina f. (pejorative) trollop, strumpet, harlot, tart. Squa(l)might add the negative meaning to whatever 'ducci' [pl. of duchess?] means, since 'drina' can be a girl's name and, in fact, was what young Queen Victoria was called. See Queen Victoria by Lytton Strachey.

Somehow the meanings seem to fit Pynchonian themes: from the sound, to the Biblical sexual allusion (of saved purity) reduced to lack of such purity.

21/14 - dancing the dirty boogie
a voluptuous dance (with varying lyrics) originating within the African-American tradition. "The “Dirty Boogie,” which was made famous by another film, “Dirty Dancing.” As you may recall, this film takes place in the 1960’s in a small Catskill resort where a dance instructor taught a young seventeen year-old varius types of sexy dance moves: one being the “Dirty Boogie.” Of course there was a scene in the movie showing all the teenagers and young adults doing the “Dirty Boogie.” Many of the dance moves in the “Dirty Boogie,” resembled movements featured in the movie, “Lambada.” These movements were acting out sexual pleasure on the dance floor. The Rolling Stones do a "Dirty Boogie" on their Black & Blue album.

21/15 - clown's motley
Motley refers to the traditional costume of the Court jester or the Harlequin character in Commedia dell'arte.[31]

22/15 - Rachel Owlglass
"Rachel" means "ewe" in Hebrew; the name of Jacob's wife, who, after long infertility, gave birth to Joseph. Jacob was tricked by her father into working for him for 7 years only to be given Leah instead of Rachel. He agreed to 7 more years of labor to have Rachel too. Ahh polygamy! She dies giving birth to Benjamin. [32] "Owlglass" is the Anglicization of "Eulenspiegel"; Till Eulenspiegel was a trickster/fool in German folklore and protagonist of "Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks", a tone poem by Richard Wagner. "Eule"="owl", "Spiegel"="mirror". [33]

22/15 - the Catskills
Catskill Mountains, an area northwest of New York City, famous as a vacation resort area. Wikipedia.

22/15 - shakedown cruise
Shakedown cruise is a nautical term in which the performance of a ship is tested. Shakedown cruises are also used to familiarize the ship's crew with operation of the craft. The term can also refer in a generic sense to the process of testing out any new technology or systems. [34]

22/15 - gee and haw
To haw and gee — To haw and gee about, to go from one thing to another without good reason; to have no settled purpose; to be irresolute or unstable. [Colloq.] Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, 1913.

The phrase derives from "Hey and Go" - turn right and turn left, and was originally used in leading oxen and cattle by teamsters.[35]

22/15 - Schlozhauer's Trocadero

The word trocadero, which in Spanish means "place of barter" (from trocar: "to barter"), goes back to a fortified site near Cadiz, Spain, that was the stronghold of the Constititutionalists in the revolution of 1820 and that fell to the French in 1823. During the International Exhibition of 1878 an ornate palace was built to commemorate the French victory. "Trocadero" became a popular name for public places in Europe, one being the Trocadero Palace of Varieties in London, known as "The Troc," which opened as a music hall in 1882 on the corner of Shaftsbury Avenue and Windmill Street.

22/15 - Liberty
Liberty, New York: Google Map

22/15 - Da Conho translates from Brazilian Portuguese as "from/of I know" according to Google and Bing translate, which matches the description on 23/16 that he "knew no more than that he was a Zionist, suffered was confused, was daft to stand rooted sock-top deep in the loam of any kibbutz".

22/15 - fight Arabs in Israel
Of the 950,000 estimated Arabs in Israel before Israel became a state in 1948, an estimated 156,000 remained after. Wikipedia

23/16 - Parris Island
Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island is an 8,095 acre (32.9 km²) military installation near Beaufort, South Carolina, tasked with the training of enlisted Marines. Male recruits living east of the Mississippi River and female recruits from all over the USA report here to receive their initial training. Wikipedia

23/16 - Haganah
The Haganah (Hebrew: "The Defense") was a Jewish paramilitary organization in what was then the British Mandate of Palestine from 1920 to 1948. This paramilitary became the core of the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) that would have been what Da Conho would have joined to fight the Arabs. Wikipedia

23/16 - mezuzah
A mezuzah (Hebrew: "doorpost") is a piece of parchment (usually contained in a decorative case) inscribed with specified Hebrew verses from the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4-9 and 11:13-21). These verses comprise the Jewish prayer "Shema Yisrael," and begin with the phrase "Hear, O Israel, the Lord your God, the Lord is One." Wikipedia

23/16 - iceberg lettuce
The Iceberg lettuce industry exploded during WWII as salads were seen as a real morale booster. After the war, its popularity continued as soldiers came home wanting the same assortment of fresh produce procured by the military. [36] California producers of iceberg lettuce were the targets of protests by Cesar Chavez's National Farm Workers Association, beginning in the very early sixties.

23/16 - watercress
The capital growing city of this leaf vegetable was Huntsville, Alabama until:

"The city's transformation began with the arrival of Wernher von Braun, Hitler's chief missile designer, whose V-2 rocket terrorized London and other British cities. An SS major who headed rocket research at the Peenemunde complex, where slave laborers were starved, beaten, and worked to death, von Braun could have ended up in the docket at Nuremberg like other leading Nazis. But at war's end, the Pentagon was anxious to plumb German scientific know-how in order to improve America's weaponry. Under the top-secret Operation Paperclip, the Army smuggled von Braun and his team of 118 Peenemunde scientists out of Germany and brought them to the United States. After first going to a military base near El Paso, they were taken to Huntsville in 1950 and put to work at Redstone Arsenal." [37]

23/16 - Belgian Endive
A leaf vegetable grown completely underground or indoors in the absence of sunlight, a process that prevents the leaves from turning green and opening up. [38]

23/16 - Abdul Sayid
Abdul (also transliterated Abdel, `Abd al-, and other ways) means "servant of the", and is the first part of many Arabic names. It is combined with one of the 99 Names of God in the Qur'an to form a two-word Arabic theophoric name. [39] Sayid or Sayyid is an honorific title given to males who are thereby said to be descendants of the prophet Muhammed, founder of Islam.

24/17 - pedestrian girls
notice double meaning.

The 1913 edition of Webster's Dictionary seems to be, from this and other citations, one of Pynchon's major linguistic resources or, at least, gives some of the most resonant meanings from a Pynchon Perspective.

24/7 - drained-nervous
With the hyphen, this shows another older archaic usage. Cf. Snow-shroud and the loss of hyphens between words above.

27/21 - a pimpled bravo

A "bravo" is a villain, desperado; esp. a hired assassin

32/26 - Dewey, now astride a lifeline on the bridge, gave a bass string intro and began to sing Blue Suede Shoes, after Elvis Presley.
A slight anachronism. We know the date is 1st January 1956. Carl Perkins wrote "Blues Suede Shoes" in on 4/5 December 1955, and released the record on 1st January 1956. Elvis recorded it on 30th January 1956 and first played it on television on the 11th February. It was the first track on his first album, released March. So Dewey couldn’t have played "Blue Suede Shoes" after Elvis Presley.

An anachronism, but "after" here means "in the manner of".

37/32 - horniness
a state of sexual excitement. Pynchon is the first citation in the Oxford English Dictionary for use of this word in print, in V..

39/34 - screw where his navel should have been...
The navel is where the umbilical cord attaches. When the boy unscrews it, his body falls apart. This is a repeated reference that bodily traits are passed on through genetics and the umbilical cord attaches you to a parent. If you try to undo it, you will undo yourself.

41/37 - Luis Aparicio
Venezuelan major-league baseball player; American League Rookie of the year in 1956, playing for the Chicago White Sox.

42/38 - Geronimo broke off the song to say “Coño” and wobble his fingers.
"Coño" is Spanish for "cunt"

43/39 - now [the alligators] moved big, blind albino, all over the sewer system...
The urban legend of alligators living in the sewers of New York was given the some credence when, in the 1950s, Edward P. "Teddy" May, the superintendent of sewers in New York City, went down into the sewers to investigate and told a journalist that he'd seen "Alligators serenely paddling around in his sewers. The beam of his own flashlight had spotlighted alligators whose length, on the average, was about two feet. Some may have been longer." (The World Beneath The City, Robert Daley, 1959). However, Mr. May's credibility has been questioned and, in truth, the sewers are an environment inhospitable to alligators or caimons, and reports of their subterranean existence have been greatly exaggerated. New York Times article about this...

However, a Nile crocodile was captured in the sewers of Paris, albeit in 1984, after the book was published. See for example this article or this one.
43/39 -Zeitsuss

'Zeit' [German] = Time. "suss" = Sweet. Mr. Zeitsuss is head of the Alligator Patrol.


Chapter 1
In which Benny Profane, a schlemihl and human yo-yo, gets to an apocheir
9/1
Chapter 2
The Whole Sick Crew
44/39
Chapter 3
In which Stencil, a quick-change artist, does eight impersonations
61/59
Chapter 4
In which Esther gets a nose job
95/97
Chapter 5
In which Stencil nearly goes West with an alligator
111/115
Chapter 6
In which Profane returns to street level
134/141
Chapter 7
She hangs on the western wall
152/161
Chapter 8
In which Rachel gets her yo-yo back, Roony sings a song, and Stencil calls on Bloody Chiclitz
213/229
Chapter 9
Mondaugen's story
229/247
Chapter 10
In which various sets of young people get together
280/305
Chapter 11
Confessions of Fausto Maijstral
304/333
Chapter 12
In which things are not so amusing
347/385
Chapter 13
In which the yo-yo string is revealed as a state of mind
367/407
Chapter 14
V. in love
393/437
Chapter 15
Sahha
415/461
Chapter 16
Valletta
424/471
Epilogue, 1919
456/507
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