ATD 821-848

Revision as of 19:36, 27 January 2007 by MKOHUT (Talk | contribs) (Page 829)

Please keep these annotations SPOILER-FREE by not revealing information from later pages in the novel.


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Page 821

John of Asia
John of Asia, also called John of Ephesus, was a 6th-century church leader and historian. The ruins of Ephesus are located in western Asia Minor, now in Turkey.

coastline approaching infinite length
Another reference to the "crisis" in mathematics. The closer you look at the coastline, the longer it gets. If you could view it from infinitely close up, it would become infinitely long. Although this pov is true, might this line mean that the "coastline" of the Adreatic Sea, which is where Bocche di Cattaro is, circling as it does on the inside, almost connects with itself? When it would be "infinite". See Wikipedia.

Page 822

Jacintha Drulov
The surname suggests the necessity of wiping the "drool off" the gentlemen's chins.

Lady Quethlock
Quethlock is/was a place in Australia in 1915.

Zhenski Tzrnogorski Institut
Montenegrin Female Institute. To anyone neither a Serb nor a Croat, the Serbian and Croatian languages appear to differ only in the alphabet used to write them: Cyrillic (similar to Russian) for the Serbian aspect, Roman for the Croatian. This name is definitely transliterated from Cyrillic letters, hence comes from Serbian (Женски Црногорски Институт, I believe)—the corresponding Croatian name would have been Ženski Crnogorski Institut. Its identification as a Tsarist institution on page 824 supports Serbian, too. The "tz" signals an origin in pre-standardization times and may therefore indicate that Pynchon has found a real school. --Volver 08:32, 21 January 2007 (PST)

Page 823

Baden-Powell
Pronounced BAY-den POLE (other branches of the family say POOL). British officer who after service in the Boer Wars founded the Boy Scouts.

Applied Idiotics
I suggest this is a minor theme of AtD. Every couple of chapters we have a reference to someone learning to act like an idiot (never a fool, a zany, an imbecile, a twit—always an idiot). Is there a connection to the notion of the "holy fool" here? --Volver 08:17, 21 January 2007 (PST)

Chipping Sodbury
A real town in the west of England, birthplace of J. K. Rowling. Throughout AtD "sod" is a derogatory name for sodomite, homosexual.

Page 824

a Tsarist school
See the annotation to page 822.

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Page 827

Black Hand
Street name for "Union or Death" (Уједињење или Смрт, Ujedinjenje ili Smrt), founded 1911, secret society to promote formation of a Greater Serbia. I.e., freedom fighters or terrorists depending on your point of view.

Evidenzbüro
Another information-collating agency. German: evidence office.

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Page 829

"set to spy" seems a typo for "sent to spy" because of next phrase.

Careva Ulica
Croatian: Emperor Street.

Žilavka
A wine from Macedonia.

Page 830

Kiprskni
Misha and Grisha are perfectly capable of saying "Cyprian" or the Russian counterpart "Kiprian"; is this superconsonantal garble just their private joke?

tchistka
Or chistka. Russian: the cleanup.

Fehim Pasha
Head of Turkish secret police, assassinated after the 1908 revolution.

Page 831

arificial
Error for artificial.

tsiftê-télli
Greek, derived from Turkish: belly dancing. See this site for an explanation.

Page 832

fezzes
Aside from the magical explanation in the text, isn't this a silent movie gag too?

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Page 834

Zdravo, gospodini
Serbian/Croatian: Hello, gentlemen.

Ne razumen
Croatian/Serbian: not reasonable.

Page 835

"Union or Death"
See annotations to page 827.

lignite
Also called "brown coal," a dirty-burning fuel.

Page 836

poljes
Serbian/Croatian? As explained in text.

Djavola
Croatian/Serbian? "The Devil!"

Page 837

Mauser
German-made rifle.

En tu kulo Dio!
I just don't believe this is Serbian or Croatian; one of Danilo's many other languages? --Volver 15:43, 21 January 2007 (PST)

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Page 841

konak
Apparently Turkish: mansion.

Page 842

Vesna
Whatever her name may signify in Greek, it also corresponds to the Russian word for "spring" (the season).

Page 843

the mosqueless idea of a city . . . orthogonal
When the Young Turks abandon the mosque as the center of civic life, they must adopt the European model with streets meeting at right angles.

iconostasis
The screen in an Orthodox church where icons are hung.

merakloú
Greek: coquette.

Tha spáso koúpes
???

argilés
Bastard plural (i.e., English -s grafted to singular) of a Greek word argilé or arghilé: water pipe, nargileh, hookah.

Page 844

kombolói
???

karsilamás
A face-to-face couple dance.

Amán
???

Stin ipochí
???

bottom dead center of the European Question
In a rotary system like the crankshaft of an engine, angles and times are reckoned from one of two points: top dead center and bottom dead center. Bottom dead center occurs when the piston is at its lowest point and stationary for an instant.

Page 845

dervisidhes
???

Gabrovo Slim
Gabrovo is a city in northern central Bulgaria, 100 miles east of Sofia. Another AtD character named for his physique (like, e.g., Flaco = "slim" in Spanish).

rembetes
???

Gotse Deltchev
Or Delchev (1872-1903), killed in the St. Ilya's Day uprising against Turkish rule in Macedonia.

Big Bulgaria
I.e., Bulgaria as it existed then plus all areas considered by Bulgarians to be inhabited by other Bulgarians, Macedonia above all.

Page 846

Tsoupra mou
???

Karakas Effendi
???

Exarch
In the Eastern Orthodox Church, deputy to a patriarch.

The City
Constantinople. Its present name, Istanbul (Stambul), comes from the Greek phrase eis ten polin (είς την πολιν): into the City.

Eminönü
Dock area of Constantinople at the mouth of the Golden Horn, on the south (Stambul) side of that inlet.

Stamboul
Former English spelling of Stambul or Istanbul.

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Page 848

Ultraviolet Catastrophe
The Rayleigh-Jeans law says that the intensity of radiation emitted at any wavelength λ by a body at a temperature T is proportional to T/λ4. Jacintha, "carelessly radiant," is following the law into the short-wavelength region (small λ) where it does not apply. The failure of Rayleigh-Jeans in the ultraviolet or short-wavelength range—it predicts infinitely intense radiation, contrary to observation—is referred to as the Ultraviolet Catastrophe.

Annotation Index

Part One:
The Light Over the Ranges

1-25, 26-56, 57-80, 81-96, 97-118

Part Two:
Iceland Spar

119-148, 149-170, 171-198, 199-218, 219-242, 243-272, 273-295, 296-317, 318-335, 336-357, 358-373, 374-396, 397-428

Part Three:
Bilocations

429-459, 460-488, 489-524, 525-556, 557-587, 588-614, 615-643, 644-677, 678-694

Part Four:
Against the Day

695-723, 724-747, 748-767, 768-791, 792-820, 821-848, 849-863, 864-891, 892-918, 919-945, 946-975, 976-999, 1000-1017, 1018-1039, 1040-1062

Part Five:
Rue du Départ

1063-1085

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