Brokeback Mountain: Our Community's Common Bond > Brokeback Mountain Open Forum

A line from the SS thst intrigues me

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retropian:
"They came together on paper...."

If there was a previous discussion on this line, I missed it. For some reason it's been on my mind lately. What does AP mean and intend with that. I have two thoughts, neither mutually exclusive.

First, is AP engaging a playful postmodern tease with the reader. I. E. they are characters that exist only on the page the reader is reading. The author is the God/Creator of the characters and the universe they inhabit, and we the readers then participate in that creation via the acts of reading an imagining. The God/creator's creation doesn't truly exist until there is a separate consciousness to participate in the creation. There is no existence until it is acknowledged by a consciousness other than the Creators.

Or, second, is this another reference to Genesis. As Adam and Eve exist only on paper in a mythological story, so to do Jack and Ennis.

Is it both? Neither?

I'm just thinking out loud, or rather thinking/typing.

Fran:
I went with a simpler explanation:  Jack and Ennis' names were written one after the other in Joe Aguirre's employment records. 

Thanks for giving me something to think about. 

LauraGigs:
I'd always thought it was a subtle marriage metaphor.  Coupled with the other details of the opening in Aguirre's office... they're standing together before a judge/authority figure, who sends them off to be alone together.

mariez:

--- Quote from: LauraGigs on July 03, 2009, 02:36:58 am ---I'd always thought it was a subtle marriage metaphor.  Coupled with the other details of the opening in Aguirre's office... they're standing together before a judge/authority figure, who sends them off to be alone together.

--- End quote ---

That's how I've always thought of it, too.  Aguirre even sends them off on animals that are "ring-lashed with double diamonds."

optom3:
I read the S.S first and after the prologue, I remember thinking that, they came together on paper was an indication that they would come together in other ways also.
I love the marriage idea and I think it fits in well on one level, the only problem I have is that it seems the only way they never really came together,  on a permanant basis. They came together as friends, lovers, partners of the soul and heart. Ironically the only record of them being permanently together, is in that shack where Aguirre gave them their instructions.
I do know that when I reached the end of the story, I was sobbing and that line came back to haunt me. They spent a lifetime never doing what Jack so badly desired. Sure they had their illicit fishing trips, but that was it.
The only time I think of them as being forever joined is when we read of, or see the 2 shirts. This is a story and film that still hurts me on almost every level, after all this time. I do not think I will ever be this affected by a story or film ever again.

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