Valt het op dat het lekker was? #delint #oudturnhout (bij Brasserie De Lint)

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Valt het op dat het lekker was? #delint #oudturnhout (bij Brasserie De Lint)

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Fan theory for Kay and P, possible spoilers?
I think Kay was able to see P as a child because her world boundaries were more flexible and thus she was more open to being able to see him, in contrast with her parents who are shown as having seriously strict boundaries. However, rather than wholeheartedly accepting the existence of Fey (as I am assuming the people she's seeing now are) she accepted P as an anomaly. Her exposure, however has gone up recently and thus her awareness has also increased, as seen in the increasing frequency of her observing Fey individuals. My theory here is that the sudden increase can be attributed to her interactions with Juan ,who bares a striking resemblance to the dog seen Issue 1 page 10 and 11, and is later seen sniffing the air when P is around, and has pronounced canine. This could also explain why P was so adamant in his disapproval of said suitor.
There are three reasons P could be afraid of Kay being exposed to the world of the Fey so quickly, if at all. This, of course, also follows the logic of De Lint. In The Blue Girl the school brownies, and again in a short story through Oak's daughter states that to show an individual their world too quickly can cause a person to go into a sort of shock in which they block out that world and loose all memory of people from it. P could have been trying to protect her in this way and delayed telling her until it was too late (meaning her definitions of reality were seemingly concrete). This delay could have been caused by him seeing Kay face so much conflict from interaction with him, I mean think of what she'd have gone through if she could see a whole world. Besides, lore is littered with tales of children being tricked by Fey and even taken. The second reason could be that he was afraid for Kay's safety, the Fey while often seeming harmless can be very dangerous, especially to a human girl. The third reason is again from another DeLint short story. If one tries to force belief in something, they loose said belief entirely and thus loose touch with whatever they believe in (this is from a story in which said beliefs are embodied by birds that will literally fly away). Note: most of the short stories I've mentioned are from Dreams Underfoot
That being said, everyone should read De Lint's works and Kay and P.
"The point here for the best kids is to inculcate their sense that it's never about being seen. It's never. If they can get that inculcated, the Show won't fuck them up, Schtitt thinks. If they can forget everything but the game when all of you there outside the fence see only them and want only them and the game's incidental to you, for you it's about entertainment and personality, it's about the statue, but if they can get inculcated right they'll never be slaves to the statue, they'll never blow their brains out after winning an event when they win, or dive out a third-story window when they start to stop getting poked at or profiled, when their blossom starts to fade. Whether or not you mean to, babe, you chew them up, it's what you do."
Infinite Jest, DFW
Capítulo 1 (Escena 1) / Año de Glad (2010) / Pág. 9-17
El joven Harold Incandenza (Hal para los amigos y los lectores) narra una escena en la que apenas participa: durante la reunión de admisión en la Universidad de Arizona son los adultos quienes discuten las aptitudes de Hal, tanto como prodigioso tenista como estudiante de matrícula de honor (capaz de recitar páginas enteras del Diccionario Oxford, soltar galicismos, y entregar trabajos como "Conjeturas neoclásicas en gramática normativa contemporánea", etc).
El tío Charles (Tavis) y el entrenador Aubrey F. DeLint han pedido a Hal que no abra la boca, es más, que se esfuerce por no sonreír (?); por alguna extraña razón cuando Hal trata de mostrarse simpático los demás ven una mueca grotesca que parece indicar que algo anda mal (??).
En silencio, Hal se limita a analizar los gestos y personajes que lo rodean (la narración es en primera persona, su elocuencia dista mucho de ser la de un deportista bineuronal: este chaval es un superdotado).
Por supuesto los decanos tienen algunas dudas acerca de la idoneidad de admitir a Hal en la universidad, puesto que hace un año su rendimiento académico se desplomó, así, sin más; Hal se mantuvo como un atleta portentoso de la raqueta pero perdió las excelentes calificaciones que lo caracterizaban en la Academia Enfield de Tenis, en la que reside desde los siete años. Los decanos exigen una justificación; que sea el propio Hal quien explique a qué se debe ese descenso abrupto en las notas y que demuestre que no están a punto de aceptar a un zopenco, hacer la vista gorda para beneficiarse de sus logros deportivos sería indecente.
A Hal le llega el turno y, aunque prevé que no logrará hacerse entender (???), responde que no es ningún analfabeto y que las buenas notas no han sido falseadas, las obtuvo por méritos propios. "Ahora no puedo hacerme entender", dice Hal, "DIgamos que es algo que comí".
¿Qué se comió qué? ¿Qué problema tiene Hal para comunicarse? ¿Qué ocurrió un año antes? La novela se abre en el Año de Glad, esto es 2010 (en la página 257 se adjunta la Cronología del Tiempo Subsidiado, vale la pena familizarse con ésta: una de las peculiaridades de la cronologia en La broma infinita es que transcurre en un futuro -la novela es de 1996- en el que los años están patrocinados para aportar ingresos al gobierno de la ONAN; otra de las peculiaridades es que las naciones de Norteamérica se han aliado en una Organización de las Naciones Norte Americanas), sea lo que sea que impide a Hal hablar con normalidad ocurrió en el Año de la Ropa Interior para Adultos Depend, 2009. Y este es el único capítulo que se desarrolla en 2010; mientras que el resto de la novela va saltando adelante y atrás sin rebasar nunca el noviembre de 2009. Hemos empezado el texto por el final. Se abre el telón de esta inagotable tragicomedia (para la que habrá que tener un Hamlet, bien a mano; una droga que estimule la concentración y otra para la paciencia).
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