Am I the only one who has noticed the parallels Infinite Jest has with The Brothers Karamazov and Hamlet?
While the Hamlet parallels are fairly straightforward in terms of interpretation: Himself is disposed from the throne as headmaster of ETA by his death, and is replaced by the protagonists Uncle who is also sexually involved with his mother, Avril. Also the wraith of Himself has obvious parallels with the ghost of Hamlet's father appearing to him. The Brothers K similarities are less heavy handed: Orin is a sensualist who embraces the hedonistic culture of the modern Era, much like Dmitri Karamazov. Another similarity is the theme of patricide. While Orin does not kill his father he disturbs his grave and disrespects the Quebecois burial rights which unleashes his ghost. Hal is coldly rational, which is depicted by the author as an obviously unsustainable lifestyle much like Ivan Karamazov. Mario is pure, and the youngest, the only hope of the novel which has obvious similarities with Alyosha.
>hurr durr how come stories have similar motifs
Because there's only about 5 plots total?
>>8987927
not the one im writing about the guy who tries to perfect the art of volleying piss into his own asshole
>>8987921
Wow, never thought of this before...
>>8987927
Yes, except OP is obviously right in this instance, retard.
Although I thought the TBK parallels were kinda obvious if you read both, so no, OP, you haven't said something groundbreaking, but yes, you're also right, good job.
>>8987921
Hal is younger than Mario, but yeah Alyosha
and pretty sure i remember IJ directly namedrops The Brothers Karamazov (referred to as, iirc, "good old Brothers K" or some such)