As the Marathe and Kate at the bar section entered my head I began to get the sense of DFW having both an angelic and a demonic side.* A displaying of an extreme humanistic stance and something like its opposite in the text.
The Ugliest Girl Of All Time, for how could it get worse than this?:
"She had no skull...Without the confinement of the metal hat the head hung from the shoulders like the half-filled balloon or empty bag, the eyes and oral cavity greatly distended from this hanging, and sounds exiting this cavity which were difficult to listen...her head it had also neither muscles nor nerves...the sac of her head...the more than standard accepted amounts of eyes and cavities in many stages of development upon different parts of the body...cerebro-and-spinal fluids which dribbled at all times from her distending oral cavity...cerebro-spinally incontinent woman...[needing] special pans and drains...[and she had] a hand-hook" (778-780)
Her face, surreal in bad way, beyond the droopiness and meltiness of a watch painted by Dali. With the use of the word "incontinent" it's as if her head literally shitted and pissed. And eyes and cavities on her body?
Let's call her Blob I. Consider the similarities, because also limp-headed (a symbol of what their hideousness does to a man's penis?) of Blob I to Blob II: "It":
"a vegetable (like Marathe's wife became)...invertebrate...[not a] valid member of the chordate phylum...[lying] in a heap...with only the whites of its eyes showing [a life in death look], with fluid dribbling from its mouth and elsewhere, and making unspeakable gurgly noises...pale and moist and...stagnant...soggy...paralytic pliability [which afforded It the ability to be raped, despite paralysis is what seems implied]" (370-371)
After one of her many rapes It had an expression straight out of the chordate phylum that she's said to not be a valid member of, another life in death twist, a theme that's come up before in the book. (Were her eyes rolled back then, too?) "Its expression...Its face looked post-coital sort of the way you'd imagine the vacuole and optica of a protozoan looking post-coital after its shuddered and shot its mono-cellular load into the cold waters of some really old sea." (373)
"It" is not only less than human, but akin to the very lowest form of life. And while experiencing one of the most sublime of emotions in human life. A total turning on its head of the natural order of things.
Both Blob I and Blob II are, paradoxically, participating in what are some of the highest forms of human connection, desire, sex, marriage. Although in the case of Marathe, it is passionless desire. Here the idea of desire/despair over the unattainable beauty is turned on it's head. When there is deep despair, to the point of suicidality, over not being able to be with a woman it is usually the case that female beauty plays a big part, at least in literature. In Marathe's case he was suicidal over not being able to be with a woman beyond hideous. Their "participation" in humanity doesn't cause us to see the Blobs as any more human; the descriptions of them just don't allow that.
The extremes of the idea of the P.G.O.A.T. and Marathe's wife, the extremes of what desire is to different people in a way are parallel to the two opposite facets of DFW's overall text. So I don't think that DFW is writing about Blobs I and II to get us to feel compassion over their plight (although who is more lonely than they are, who would have more reason to be "psychotically depressed" than people like this? Because they don't think, they don't feel, so we don't have to feel for them either.) That's not what the writer focuses on. In Marathe's wife especially the "ick" factor is very high, and for me that's my main reaction to her. How else to think of a face that seems to continually urinate and defacate? It seems as though DFW is intentionally trying to really gross us out. Furthermore, I think it can even be seen as a sort of (maybe unconsciously) power-trip/sadistic attitude towards the reader. He does it because he can. "It' being imagine things and describe things that will be more repulsive than anything we have ever seen before. But on the other hand, where has there ever been more penetrating descriptions of internal mental suffering in human beings, one that arouses compassion and understanding even in people who haven't experienced this? There are all those other sections of the book that are so completely unlike anything in literature that has ever dealt with these difficult subjects. This is DFW as angel.
*The eye of the author is sometimes a very judgemental one. He notices things that innocent (I'm not one of these) and even not-so-innocent eyes would not notice about other human beings--the average ones that we see everyday. Here are a few examples: That old men who are physically fit look creepy. That Norwegian blond people's blond eyelashes are creepy. That people who look like they have Down Syndrome are included in the ranks of the hideous, therefore by extension people who have Down Syndrome are hideous. When he thinks up the example of the fat woman who's fat makes her lose control of the situation, especially the fecal aspects of it, he's not painting a pretty picture of fat people either. He's making this person into a kind of Blob too, that has no control over her body. The fat man in the Meeting at Quabbin Recovery Systems is not painted too flatteringly. This all reminds me a little of the story that DFW wrote (whose title escapes me) of the boy who looks at his father and rather repulsed by what he sees. My impression is that he has a bit of "snotty looking-right-through-you-if-you-weren't-a fucking-covergirl (or coverboy) Ken E." in him. When human beings in the text are defective, it's almost like they might as well be "Blobs" because he sometimes sees creepiness in just what's average. (I admit that I catch myself doing the same thing.) And if you're not a P.G.O.A.T or a 56-year old woman who is physically fit--notice that doesn't make her creepy--and only seemed to get sexier as she ages, then you're defective. Okay, so I'm exaggerating. Is this deliberate or the effects on him, as on all of us, of "the USA image-culture"? Is he just trying to show this or is he controlled by it to some extent? Is it really just humanism in disguise? What do you all think?
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