(urth) Dionysus
David Stockhoff
dstockhoff at verizon.net
Thu Dec 9 17:55:47 PST 2010
Allusion.
An *allusion* is a figure of speech that makes a reference to, or
representation of, a place, event, literary work, myth
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mythology>, or work of art, either
directly or by implication. M. H. Abrams defined allusion as "a brief
reference, explicit or indirect, to a person, place or event, or to
another literary work or passage".^[1]
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allusion#cite_note-0> It is left to the
reader or hearer to make the connection (Fowler); where the connection
is detailed in depth by the author, it is preferable to call it "a
reference <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reference>".
The god is present when humans take the blood of grapes into their
bodies. James is right---there is no leap whatsoever. only a bit of a
twist, an unexpected rotation in space that makes two cults seem to
align for just a moment.
On 12/9/2010 7:16 PM, Gerry Quinn wrote:
>
> From: "James Wynn" <crushtv at gmail.com>
>>>> Lee Berman-
>>>> 2. The suggestion is that Gene Wolfe, in associating Dionysus with
>>>> parasitic lianas, is not
>>>> misinterpreting but engaging in word play as he often does. Nobody
>>>> here thinks Gene Wolfe
>>>> is confused as to the meanings of "Theseus" and "thesis" but some
>>>> think he is engaging in
>>>> word play there. Nor do we think Gene Wolfe is a dunce who thinks
>>>> the mother of Romulus and
>>>> Remus, Rhea Silvia, was named for a Bird Of The Woods. Word play
>>>> again.
>>>
>>> Gerry Quinn-
>>> I think this would be a somewhat obscure word-game. To get it one
>>> would have to identify Dionysus as the son of Thyone,
>>
>> There's a real leap. That's about as obscure as identifying Cain and
>> Able as the children of Eve. Or Mary as the mother of Jesus. Or
>> Romulus as the child of Rhea Silvia.
>>
>>> and then *misread* his association with vines - in other words, see
>>> him called 'god of vines' and not realise that this meant grape vines.
>>
>> Umm....I can't imagine why anyone would be expected to miss that
>> association since the inhumi feed on the red, red wine of the human
>> body. I guess unless the lianas (grape vines ARE lianas, btw) had
>> humans growing on them and the inhuma extracted the blood by mashing
>> the people with their feet, this would be just too hard an allusion
>> for anyone to pick up on.
>
> Note that I was answering Lee, who seemed to be saying that this *was*
> an American misreading.of the 'god of vines' concept. You seem to be
> saying the opposite.
>
> Also, wouldn't your analogy above (the inhumi feeding on human blood,
> represented as wine) mean that it is the humans who are represented by
> the lianas, not the inhumi?
>
> Lee seemed to be saying that Wolfe took Dionysus to be the god of
> vines and thus by wordplay to parasitic plants, with the parasitism of
> lianas being the connection to inhumi.
>
> - Gerry Quinn
>
>
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