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The Recognitions
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The Recognitions by William Gaddis
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Wyatt's upbringing by his devout Grandmother and Calvinist minister father is such a great (seemingly) extreme cultural difference between the society parties that still conveys this point. The tension of what counts as the 'true authentic way' is a tension in the religious world between sects and claims of prophecy as much as in the art world between forgeries and divergent movements. His father's eventual departure from conventional Christian doctrine, into different Indigenous beliefs and finally into a Mithraic Cult evokes the idea of how every 'one true faith practice' is derivative of earlier beliefs and customs.
Other than authenticity/fraud and the ambiguity between the two, another big theme of the novel is in the other similarities of the 'saintly/religious' versus 'hedonistic/artistic' life. Notably, in the aspect of obsessive devotion and 'purity politics' in the removal of impure society from the 'authentic' person. I found this to be a fascinating theme.
This would be an interesting question, and often it was, except that it was padded out with hour after hour (on audio) of tedious New York parties of the kind where people stand around trying to be clever. Later things changed - there was a murder, and the scene shifted to Europe - but there was still a lot of dialogue that seemed completely pointless to me.
The story often failed to hold my attention, which may be why I found some of the characters interchangeable. Was there any difference between Esmé and Esther? Were they actually the same person going by two names, or was Gaddis the kind of writer who supplied his male characters with indistinguishable female love interests? What about the girl on the boat? Was she Esmé or Esther or another indistinguishable woman? There was another one called Rose. And were these women all the same because they were designed to embody the theme of similarity, genuine/copy/fake? Or am I crediting Gaddis with too much subtlety there?
I was bored by this most of the time, and I probably missed a lot because my attention wandered so much. Looking back, having finished it, I find the themes intriguing. But if I ever revisit this book, I will get a paper copy and skip all the parties.