Susanna Clarke's Piranesi: Gaslight gatekeep girlboss
Description
The beauty of this book is immeasurable, and its kindness is infinite.
We all love Susanna Clarke's 2012 metaphysical thriller, which feels like a mashup of Borges/C.S. Lewis/Gone Girl.
Venture deeper into the labyrinth with us:
Piranesi as amateur scientist: On indigenous knowledge, the dangers of naïve empiricism, achieving dominion over nature, and whether the Other kind of had a point.
Metaphysics of the House: Are abstractions real, revisiting Plato's world of perfect forms, and whether the world is fundamentally Good.
Identity and mental illness: The illusion of stable personhood over time, repressed memories as trauma response, and how a person with dementia or psychosis can maintain a consistent internal worldview.
CHAPTERS
- (00:00:00 ) meet the Beloved Child of the House
- (00:09:55 ) Piranesi as amateur scientist
- (00:19:48 ) metaphysics of the House and Plato’s theory of forms
- (00:38:13 ) C.S. Lewis allusions
- (00:41:21 ) The BIG REVEAL (spoilers)
- (00:46:30 ) The illusion of stable personhood
- (00:55:02 ) Internal consistency of dementia or psychosis patients
- (01:02:30 ) Piranesi’s escape and reintegration
- (01:09:11 ) Is the world (or the House) fundamentally Good?
SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS:
We wanna start reading listener feedback out on the pod, so send us a note at douevenlit@gmail.com to correct our bad takes or share your own.
NEXT ON THE READING LIST:
Crime and Punishment - Dostoyevsky (reading in three parts over six weeks)