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Mason & Dixon

 Mason & Dixon
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TVTItem
 Mason & Dixon
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Mason & Dixon
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MasonAndDixon
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Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_content_3'); })Mason & Dixon is a 1997 postmodern historical fiction novel by Thomas Pynchon. Another DoorStopper novel by Pynchon, and more of a contrast to Gravity’s Rainbow in terms of characters and storytelling.Mainly a re-imagining of two British astronomers; Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon. Best remembered for running the boundary between Pennsylvania and Maryland that has come to be known as the Mason-Dixon Line. The novel’s plot is told in a frame narrative by Reverend Wicks Cherrycoke, “a clergyman of dubious orthodoxy, who attempts to entertain and divert his extended family on a cold December evening—partly for amusement, and partly to keep his coveted status as a guest in the house.”Pynchon's masterpiece, a book of transporting wonder, lavish good humour, impossible intelligence and inimitable style, with enough wit for a generation of writers and a heart as big as a planet. Laurence Sterne might have written it, had he been alive in the 1990s.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_content_2'); })Written in a parodic 18th-century variant of the Pynchon style, it is a traveller's tall tale that follows the astronomer-surveyors Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon through South Africa to the South Atlantic and across America, where they plotted their famous Line shortly before the War of Independence.As with all Pynchon's books, Mason & Dixon is framed as a historical novel but takes place in a world tilted several degrees from real event: "It may be the Historian's duty to seek the Truth," one character observes, "yet must he do ev'rything he can, not to tell it." Accordingly, our heroes smoke dope with George Washington, encounter an omnipotent, supersonic version of Vaucanson's mechanical duck, are visited by ghosts, and encounter Feng Shui masters, were-beavers, UFOs and much more besides.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_content_1'); })It's a hymn to the American unknown, or as Pynchon writes, to "all that may yet be true … til the next Territory to the West be seen and recorded, measur'd and tied in, back into the Net-Work of Points already known, that slowly triangulates its Way into the Continent, changing all from subjunctive to declarative, reducing Possibilities to Simplicities that serve the ends of Governments, – winning away from the realm of the Sacred, its Borderlands one by one, and assuming them unto the bare mortal World that is our home, and our Despair.Oh yes. And it’s gigantic and complex of course.Like many of Pynchon's novels, it also has its own wiki, which may prove to be a helpful resource for newcomers.
 Mason & Dixon
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2019-06-29T03:13:25Z
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2020-06-24T07:16:25Z
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 Mason & Dixon / int_1c79ae8c
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Those Two Guys
 Mason & Dixon / int_1c79ae8c
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Those Two Guys: It's right in the title.
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Only Sane Man
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Only Sane Man: Usually Mason, occasionally Dixon, and sometimes no one.
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Foregone Conclusion
 Mason & Dixon / int_3bc88a7f
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Foregone Conclusion: Anyone who does some basic research into the lives of Mason and Dixon will not be surprised by the fact that both are dead by the time the novel ends, and the line is never completed. Also, while it's not stated whose funeral it was that the Reverend came to Philadelphia for, it becomes clear further into the book that it was Mason's.
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World of Snark
 Mason & Dixon / int_85f0f0fb
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World of Snark: Mason and Dixon are frequently at the wrong end of snarking from nearly everyone they meet, including colonists, revolutionaries, slaves, historical figures, supernatural creatures and their own superiors, teachers and crew. They tend to involve a surprising amount of erudition. The duo does get in on it as well, though less often, and usually to each other.
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Kudzu Plot
 Mason & Dixon / int_8b5e8731
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Kudzu Plot: Although not as complicated overall as some of Pynchon's other work, Mason and Dixon's relatively linear journey still stumbles across tons of sub-plots, most prominently an ambiguously real conspiracy theory involving the Society of Jesus that is never explained. Further complicating matters is the fact that the story is told by multiple people, all of whom may be lying.
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Lighter and Softer
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Lighter and Softer: Much more heartfelt, humane, and warmer in contrast to Pynchon’s early works including V., The Crying of Lot 49 and Gravity’s Rainbow.
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Loads and Loads of Characters
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Loads and Loads of Characters: A cast of hundreds.
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Antiquated Linguistics
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Antiquated Linguistics: The entire novel is written in a pastiche of eighteenth-century writing that successfully averts Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe, though the dialect is somewhat exaggerated. This makes it one of his more difficult novels for newcomers, though some critics consider it to be one of the novel's strengths; critic Harold Bloom has cited it as the most sublime novel of the 20th century.
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Mason & Dixon

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