So much of the book so far seems to be about the impossibility of communication, the points at which communication breaks down and understanding becomes impossible no matter how hard you try. It's expressed on the level of the characters (Hal in the opening pages, Kate Gompert describing her depression, basically everything Mario experiences, the guy with the cold Don Gately accidentally kills, and by covering his mouth no less, Marathe and Steeply's conversation) and on the level of this imagined north american society (how brilliant is the essay on the videophone, for example) and in the text itself (!!)
The footnotes knock you out of the narrative and make you work to understand what's going on. I thought the ellipses sort of guaranteed that we wouldn't be getting a complete picture, because hey, we don't exactly get a complete picture in life. And I'd bet that in the end the strands don't quite come together (hello anticonfluential narrative). Hopefully though it won't matter if things add up neatly because the human experience will transcend the limits language (and all that other stuff) place on it.
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