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Black Boy

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 7.7
  Total Words: 1924
  Total Characters: 8808
  Number of Sentences: 93


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 20.69
  Characters per Words: 4.58


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 68.61
  Fog Scale Level: 11.6
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 8.83  

Black Boy

The Crying of Lot 49
In a story as confusing and ambiguous as Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49, it is difficult to connect any aspect of the book to a piece of modern culture.  However, Oedipa’s quest, her search for the truth, and the paranoia therein, are inherent in the plots of today’s most-watched television and movies.  Though many themes from the story can be tied to modern culture, perhaps the most prominent is the theme of a quest for truth.  Oedipa’s quest is best represented via a popular FOX television show called The X-Files.
     At first sight, the comparison is almost too obvious.  Agent Fox Mulder, played by David Duchovny, seeks the truth behind the apparent mystery of alien abduction and the supernatural, a quest that he dubs “the X-Files”.  Oedipa, too, is looking for the truth underneath her mystery: WASTE.  Both characters yearn for the truth behind events, a truth that may or may not exist, in mysteries that fold plots upon themselves endlessly.  Beyond the obvious similarities, however, lie more, almost uncanny, parallels.
     Though both Mulder and Oedipa claim to seek the truth, what they both seek is resolution to the questions within themselves.  For example, it is understood by fans of The X-Files that Mulder began his search for extraterrestrial life with the supposed alien abduction of his sister.  The quest for the truth, then, is personalized for Agent Mulder, as he himself claims that he would not work as an FBI agent if his sister had not been [supposedly] abducted.  Oedipa is on a personal quest as well.  No other character in the story seeks the “truth” behind WASTE, the muted courier’s horn, the play The Courier’s Tragedy, Pierce Inverarity’s stamps, and a secret postal service.  In fact, no one else has ever before made such a [possibly ridiculous] connection!  So, as both characters seek their personal truths, they slowly begin to fear that no answer exists.
     The motives of these two seekers are important, a...

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