In my 1st thread ("Eliminating Your Map") I noted the Hamlet-ish motif of "rot" (as in "Something is rotten in the state of Denmark") in the book, which shows up in myriad ways in the novel. I wanted to share my observations and look for images of rotting in the text.
The image of rotting is used, both in Hamlet and IJ, because when something is rotten, say a tree or an apple, the outer form is preserved but the inside has been hollowed out by insects or disease or other corruption. Hamlet feels that the kingdom of Denmark is rotten because his uncle became the King by killing his father, and then legitimized the coup by marrying the Queen, thus preserving the outer form of peaceful succession. The image of rottenness creates dramatic tension through the use of ironic juxtaposition: the clean exterior with a dirty secret.
In IJ we have lots of images of rotting: the repetitive mentions of Hal's dental caries (cavities), the Great Concavity itself resulting from Pres. Johnny Gentle's "Clean USA Party" platform, the heavy use of drugs by the ETA students while pretending to be clean by using other kids' urine, Orin's pristine Phoenix condo development with its giant cockroaches and dead birds... Can others find more?
There is fractal repetition of rottenness, with images both large (the country) and small (Hal himself)- very much resembling the Sierpinski Gasket mentioned a few days ago by one of our hosts. The Gasket is a shape that you create by starting with a triangle, and then removing progressively smaller triangles of the same shape as the original, ad infinitum, leaving a strange shape with infinite holes (See ). This both is a way of depicting rottenness itself (a hollowing out an initially solid shape) and also helps informs the books structure.
Interestingly, the character with the most unattractive exterior (Mario) seems to have the most wise and balanced inner life - the reverse of rotten, sort of like a kiwi fruit.
I think the image of rotting throws light on another theme: addiction itself is a form of rotting where the addict dies slowly from the inside out, unless he gets help. This helps explain why AA is being juxtaposed with the fancy tennis academy. the addicts depicted in the AA scenes have made a mess of their outer lives but are starting to clean up their inner lives, while many ETA students are doing the reverse.
I'd love to hear from others about what DFW might be trying to say with these images...
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