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Wittgenstein's Mistress (1988)

Wittgenstein's Mistress (1988)

Book Info

Rating
4.02 of 5 Votes: 5
Your rating
ISBN
1564782115 (ISBN13: 9781564782113)
Language
English
Publisher
dalkey archive press

About book Wittgenstein's Mistress (1988)

Is Wittgenstein’s Mistress For Me?The following survey is designed to predict your strength of connection to this very distinctive book. Choose the responses that apply best to you and tally the associated points. Then compare your total with the ranges below to see the course of action recommended especially for you.1. If offered, I’d choose the stack of pages by a) Danielle Steel, Jackie Collins, and Nora Roberts (1 pt.), b) Lee Child, James Patterson, and Vince Flynn (2 pts.), c) Carson McCullers, Richard Russo, and Wallace Stegner (3 pts.), d) William Gaddis, Ben Marcus, and Samuel Beckett (5 pts.)2. Plot, to me, is a) of primary importance (1 pt.) b) often a great hook, but not always required (3 pts.) c) pretty incidental to my edification and enjoyment (5 pts.)3. A premise whereby the narrator, Kate, is the last living creature on Earth sounds like a) good science fiction fare if nothing else (2 pts.) b) the potential for a slick empathy vehicle, picturing what life in isolation would be like (3 pts.) c) an intriguing conflict as we decide between a literal interpretation (as the world cracked) and one begot by madness (as the individual cracked) (5 pts.) 4. My tolerance for an unreliable narrator a) approaches zero with every fact overthrown (1 pt.) b) varies – it’s often a contrivance, though it can serve a useful purpose (3 pts.) c) is as high as it needs to be to depict a disturbed state of mind or to get at a greater truth (5 pts.) d) soars when it shows how tenuous the things we truly know can be (5 pts.)5. Randomness is a) the hobgoblin of preoccupied minds (1 pt.) b) reduced, thankfully, after illuminating patterns of fact and behavior explain all they can (2 pts.) c) next to Godliness (5 pts.)6. I give bonus points when an author a) eschews obfuscation (thereby cosseting perspicuity) (1 pt.) b) makes nuanced arguments concerning bigger issues that become clearer the more we reflect (4 pts.) c) addresses issues I don’t currently understand, might not appreciate even if I did understand, might never understand no matter how long I contemplate them, and am not entirely sure were intended as issues to begin with – but, hey, it’s all cool when distant synapses connect (5 pts.)7. Loneliness as a theme can be a) annoyingly solipsistic (1 pt.) b) enticingly solipsistic (5 pts.)8. A structure with no chapters, very short paragraphs, and little in the way of segues strikes me as a) slapdash and artificial (1 pt.) b) just another device, neither off-putting nor profound (3 pts.) c) a brilliant way of depicting Kate’s state-of-mind as she flits from one inner thought to another (5 pts.) 9. Countless references to museum art, classical music, Greek mythology and German philosophers make me a) yawn (1 pt.) b) interested to the extent that there are insights to be gleaned and connections to be made (2 pts.) c) giddy with delight, even if most of what’s said is misremembered (see #4 above re: narrative reliability) (5 pts.)10. When an intellectual heavyweight like David Foster Wallace calls a book one of the best of all time, my reaction is likely to be a) that’s the guy with the bandana, right? (1 pt.) b) yeah, but wasn’t he a philosophy major who was into all that existence and imprecision of language stuff; a pea in Markson’s a priori pod? (2 pts.) c) OK, but are we talking about the Wallace who wrote fun social commentary or the one who wrote an honors thesis that began by establishing Greek letter notation for a physical possibility structure, intersecting functional paths on ordered pairs {time, world situation}, and a primitive accessibility relation corresponding to physical possibility understood in terms of diachronic physical compatibility? (0 pts. because nobody would say this except as a gratuitous boffin joke) d) DFW – genius – damn straight! (5 pts.)11. The thing I would be most curious to know about Kate is this: a) With nobody around to see her, did she wear any clothes? (0 pts. – dude, come on, we’re trying to be serious here) b) Was she crazy because she was alone or did she see herself as alone because she was crazy? (5 pts.) c) What would it be like to be the last person on earth? Would language devolve? Would memories fade quickly? Would memories be more important for keeping yourself together? (5 pts.) d) Was there a precipitating event that put her into that state? Though oblique, hints about a former husband and son were made. Might they have been involved in the collapse? (5 pts.)Recommendations:(20 or fewer pts.) – Even with a 20 foot pole, avoid touching this one.(21 to 33 pts.) – You might give it a go if you’re curious, but don’t feel bad if you don’t. Plenty of people are fulfilled without ever picking it up. And synapses can connect with more ready payouts than this.(33 to 47 pts.) – I know it’s hard to resist after smart people like DFW and prominent Goodreads friends have praised it. So please do try it if you want, but it’s not like you’re a cretin if you don’t. And even a close reading may have you wondering, “to what end?”(48 or more pts.) – Drop everything you’re reading right now including cereal boxes, bathroom walls, and Goodreads. Markson is what you need instead.Reviewer’s note: I scored a 36 myself, good for 3.5 stars rounded to 4. I sometimes wished those synapses that worked so hard to connect would have gotten a better return for the effort. But at least they did better than today’s money market funds.

The protagonist, a painter, finds herself to be the last person on earth. More accurately, the last mammal, as even cats and seagulls are nowhere to be found except in bits of tape and pieces of floating ash. For years she wanders the earth alone. Looking for people in store windows. Feeding imaginary cats. Is she mad? Has she imagined all this?That alone would've been a good premise for a novel. But Markson takes that premise as just the backdrop, the starting point for many other investigations into a mind's slow deterioration (and thus, the decay of language, memory, knowledge). Meanwhile, we are reading every word she types into a typewriter from a house on a beach.This is several years since she's been "alone". So almost everything she writes are facts and tidbits still floating around in her mind like the debris of candy-wrappers in the streets, or the El Caminos with flat tires frozen mid-bridge. Her thoughts are understandably a bit neurotic; she doubts her own memory and doubts language's ability to capture those memories:All things considered, most likely T.E. Shaw was somebody Lawrence of Arabia once fought with in Arabia, which I do remember many scenes of in the movie.Although when I say fought with, I should perhaps point out that I mean fought on the same side as, incidentally.Frequently when one says that somebody fought with somebody one could just as readily mean that person was fighting against that person, as it happens.So that when Marlon Brando and Benito Juarez were in Mexico, for instance, as in another movie I once saw, one could say that one side was fighting with the other side and mean exactly the opposite from what one means when one says that T.E. Shaw most likely was somebody that Lawrence of Arabia was fighting with in ArabiaWhat's also interesting about the above passage is that T.E. Shaw and Lawrence of Arabia was the same person. Often her recollections are half-formed, or mis-remembered like this. But it's not important for you to know (she never realizes herself) these errors (and I probably missed many also). Elsewhere she talks about how two objects can be anything but equidistant from each other, whether she can say she burned down the house when not the entire house burned down, or whether she can use the same expression to describe another house that she's taking apart to burn plank by plank, whether to truly ignore the rain would mean to walk in it, which is opposite of what one would first think, etc., etc., etc..She concerns herself mainly with these "inconsequential perplexities" and, as she quotes someone as saying, these perplexities can become the "fundamental mood of existence". Thus, her talk centers mainly around the lives of painters (Rembrandt, Van Gogh, Giotto, Rauschenberg), writers (William Gaddis, Rilke), musicians(Beethoven, Brahms, Maria Callas) and mythical figures (Helen of Troy, Clytemnestra, Cassandra).Oh yeah, and philosophers, like Wittgenstein. Because even in not talking about Wittgenstein's ideas (she claims to have never read a word of his, just as Wittgenstein has never read a word of Aristotle, she also claims), she gets at the core essence expressed in many of Wittgenstein's "language games".Which is: to show that much of what we know, expressed through language, is a kind of short-hand notation. When that tent is dismantled, we realize we didn't mean what we originally thought we meant. And that many of the questions we ask ourselves are basically illusions set up by words so that we think we are talking about something when in reality we aren't (like the cat that doesn't exist in this novel, but is named and given a personality, and thus exists in her mind, and on the page).Nevertheless, the world is all that is the case.Surely there is much more thought to be given to this topic, but as someone who has never read a word of Wittgenstein either (I've only read a biography on him, which was highly illuminating and I'm very glad I read it before reading this), I should probably not continue talking about that which I do not know. (update: read this by DFW if you want more on the philosophical side of this novel)Lastly: though this might sound like a semantic philosophy text, it isn't. It's a highly entertaining and moving novel. There is something eerie and relatable about her predicament and her state of mind, and through these word games (though they are not games to her) she is still able to get across her personality and deep sadness. It's a truly affecting novel without pulling on your emotions too directly, but through many indirect gradations.

Do You like book Wittgenstein's Mistress (1988)?

Okay, right up front, I read this on the basis that David Foster Wallace, who is unambiguously my literary hero, ascribed extremely high praise to this book. Foregoing any knuckle-biting self-analysis over what effect this had on my perceptions of the book I will just give my thoughts directly.First off, I think I could accept a description of this book as pretentious, self-indulgent, plotless, etc. All the usual suspects. Large swaths of its content are jumbled thoughts about painters, museums, writers, philosophers, ancient Greek mythology, and other assorted ivory tower, academic name-droppings and trivia. The book is constructed as series of single sentence paragraphs, has no breaks, no chapters. The narrator repeats the same things several times, self-interrogates with a faulty memory about what she's written, failed to mention, perhaps already mentioned, and so forth. However, there's more to it than this. To invoke a cliche about avant garde literature and experimental art more generally: this is a "difficult" book; it takes effort. It takes reading between the lines. In short, it requires patient meditation and perhaps the just-so levels of circumstance equalized just right to fully enjoy.(After the fact randomly inserted trivia: This book was rejected 54 times before being published. There's a interview with Markson at the end in my copy detailing this.)I found myself totally smitten with it immediately, before the blizzardy bursts of aforementioned "name-droppings" really kicked in. I think its very necessary to go into this book realizing that it consists of the strange, non-linear, typed thoughts of a woman who is, within the logic of the novel, the very last animal on the planet. No more humans, no more seagulls, no more cats, etc. This circumstance is not explained, at least not explicitly so. What IS explained though are seemingly random accounts of traversing the globe by her lonesome—living in famous European art museums—staying warm by burning art, artifacts, frames of famous paintings—admissions of periods of time where she was undeniably "mad"—descriptions of reading collections of ancient Greek plays and tearing out and burning each page after reading both sides in order to stay warm—sleeping in, driving and destroying and (oddly enough) nearly being killed by some of the millions of abandon vehicles she finds—discovering tapedecks set to 'Play' in said vehicles and listening to beautiful music in them—and many, many other heartbreaking, beautiful little descriptive gems of these kind of things that would transpire eventually in such a reality. The flurry of meandering thoughts about artists, writers, etc, (and the many dis/connections between them) as annoying as they sometimes became (though much of it was very interesting) really do serve as an excellent device which both obscures and sheds light upon the more fleshed out picture of Kate, our singular "protagonist"/narrator. A character whom I basically fell in love with, perhaps in a superficial way as so much of her person is obscured with the constant asides and gaping holes within the "plot"—but I recant the "superficial" there and want to replace it with the idea that I fell in love with her humanity, as cheesy as that may sound. She is the single loneliest character I've ever encountered. Her descriptions of imagining having seen a cat at the Colosseum in Rome, which becomes a motif throughout the book (like most of her thoughts, they repeat, all motif-ishly) becomes more clearly heartbreaking as they go on. She often has this emotionally detached voice, this sound of resignation, but it cracks and becomes desperate loneliness for the briefest flashes. She describes putting dozens of open cans of cat food about and being unable to tell if any has been eaten or not, though she seems know beneath her desperation and wishful thinking that there are no creatures left but her. Good grief, this book is appearing more beautiful to me upon reflecting on it right now than it was while I was reading it. Another cliche about "difficult" art: it makes for slow digestion. Thinking about it more now I realize that there are hundreds of beautiful little descriptions scattered throughout this book, cropping up amongst the scatterbrained trivia—some so beautiful that to try to describe them out of context just feels . . . wrong.I could go on giving sketches of her sketches, but I think, to somewhat relevantly quote Wittgenstein, "What we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence."
—Joshua Nomen-Mutatio

I have to admit that I admired this much more than I enjoyed it.I admired it for its ability to do so much with so little. Markson's novel is written, as you probably know, as a sequence of short paragraphs -- often just one sentence per paragraph -- that relate the thoughts of protagonist Kate in a spare, simple, lucid style modeled (at least superficially) on Wittgenstein's Tractatus. The content of Kate's musing is, if this makes sense, spare in a way directly analogous to its style. Most of the text consists of Kate poking around in her mind, trying to remember decontextualized facts about high-cultural figures (mostly painters and composers). She frequently makes mistakes and frequently corrects herself, as though it were of the upmost importance that she get these little facts exactly right. And in fact it's hard to deny that, because the text she's writing has no explicitly stated goal.As you probably also know, Kate is, or believes herself to be, the last remaining person on earth. So I guess she considers this exercise important insofar as her memory is the last remnant of human culture, even if there's no one else around to read what she writes. But a description like "a novel about the last person on earth trying to remember what she can of human culture" doesn't call up an image that even remotely resembles what WM is like, page by page; it calls up an image of a book full of stress and overt despair, where WM is instead calm and controlled to the point of at least superficial inanity. The kind of desiccated fact-shuffling that composes the average page of WM has much more in common with some sort of bureaucratic report or technical manual than with anything one would naturally imagine if given only some pointers about "the last person on earth" etc. If there's despair there, it's under the surface, specifically under a surface that is "controlled" not just in the way a reserved person might be controlled, but in the manner of a restaurant menu or an air conditioner's instruction pamphlet.If that sounds boring, well, it often is, which is why I have a hard time saying I actually enjoyed this book. What's impressive about it is how much Kate comes alive as a character, not by some cannily chosen set of deviations from the formal strictures, but through some power of repetition and compounding. What is simply unengaging after 30 pages starts to feel, for better or for worse, like an extremely specific personal signature by page 200, for the simple reason that you have to postulate numerous things about a person to imagine them actually going on in the manner Kate does for hundreds of pages. Markson makes a voice out of raw materials that just don't seem physically up to the task, like someone building a house of air. When I started WM, Kate's sentences felt to me like the very absence of characterization itself, the sort of simple and trivially true (or trivially false) things that can be said without letting on anything interesting about oneself or one's situation; by the end of the book Kate had become, to me, one of those literary characters who is so well defined that it is difficult to convince myself that they have no life outside of the book. One of the reviewers quoted in the front of my copy says that WM is "the astonishing equivalent of Giotto's famous gesture of drawing a perfect circle freehand," and while I'm not sure that's a perfect analogy, it definitely conveys the strangeness of Markson's achievement. Like Giotto he has performed a feat that is both impressive and sort of empty, a proof of what can happen when a human artist's hand is -- perhaps unnecessarily -- forced to meet an inhumanly rigid standard.To make yet another crude analogy, Markson has succeeded at breathing in a vacuum -- but in the end he's still just breathing, which is something you and I do all the time. That is to say, I was impressed with the trick this book pulled off but in the end it's just another novel to me, and although it comes around to success the long way, the success I see in it is a conventional sort of success. It's only that long route that distinguishes it. Maybe the problem is with me here (isn't it always?). It's much easier for me to see banality in these sorts of clipped little lines than profundity (or even admirable clarity). This is not my cup of tea, and although I gave this book four stars I have to admit that the thought of going back and re-reading all of Kate's banal statements of fact about Brahams and biographies of Brahams sounds like torture to me. But then I guess Giotto's circle wasn't much to look at, either, in the end.
—Rob

It probably took me less than 20 pages to be enamored with Wittgenstein's Mistress and I turned the last page quite in awe of David Markson. What we read as the novel is an unbroken series of sentences being typed by a woman, who could be the last animal alive on the earth. One by one she pulls out little threads out of the tangled yarn that her fading and cluttered memory has become. As she unloads her intellectual baggage, she constantly corrects and contradicts herself. We see her struggle to hold on to a train of thought and connect her ideas in some manner. Many of the thoughts are repeated and re-visited, except by the time she comes back to a thought, she may be misrembering what she had said earlier. Different ideas blend into one another, time is bent out of shape, resulting in inaccurate and mixed-up facts. There are times when something which had existed only in her head takes the shape of reality that she completely believes in. She sees some broken bottles by the garbage disposal and imagines how Rembrandt could have painted that. Several pages later she informs us that Rembrandt's painting The Broken Bottles had been painted by him standing by a garbage disposal. Sometimes details from her present or past life project themselves onto learned knowledge of hers and color it with subjectivity. Within these seemingly disorganized sentences, there is an intricate pattern through which Markson brings forth the nature of memory, the close connection between imagination and our concept of reality."What an extraordinary change takes place...when for the first time the fact that everything depends upon how a thing is thought first enters the consciousness, when, in consequence, thought in its absoluteness replaces an apparent reality." - KierkegaardHer meandering thoughts on literature, art history, philosophers etc., perhaps have to do with escapism. Her ramblings are sprinkled with little tidbits of her daily life, but one rarely finds her talking about her past life or the family she once had. Slipping into madness may be the only way she can have an iota of sanity. While her being the last animal alive on the earth is an acceptable premise, there is some hint that this world may be existing only in her head. I see the possibility of this being a coping mechanism for her to deal with her son's death. Perhaps her trying to name the cat she thought she saw at the Colosseum or the tape that makes a cat-like scratching sound, is only an attempt to name the cat that her son used to have but never gave a name to. Cat was all they called it. However the dam does break at times and what it gives away is devastating. Throughout there is a sense of sadness lurking just beneath the words, that one can't shake off. Be it her trying to play tennis with herself, or her putting out cans of cat food for a cat she knows she had only imagined.In her own rambling and scatterbrained manner, she brings up many a philosophical questions. Though I am not familiar with the related works, one of the themes I did notice was about Wittgenstein's concern with logic and precise use of language. She often discusses questions of This is not a pipe variety and worries about expressing herself accurately. The novel itself could be an example of some such philosophical theme in that the literal meaning of the words you see printed on the paper won't explicitly tell you the meaning of the novel. You have to peel the layer and discover the order in disorder. It is amazing how much Markson says without putting it into words.Amidst all the trivia, philosophy and a heartbreaking depiction of loneliness, there are several beautiful scenes that leave quite an impression ... her sitting in an automobile watching Stratford-on-Avon fill up with snow, rolling hundreds of tennis balls down the Spanish steps or the transcendental view of the Parthenon in the afternoon Sun. And the ending - the first 220 pages might be worth reading just to be able to experience those last 20 pages in the light of the rest of the novel.
—Megha

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