Infinite Jest

Infinite Jest (1996) is a critically acclaimed novel written by David Foster Wallace. An extremely complex and intricately written work (including over 100 pages of endnotes), it is set in a semi-parodic future dystopian version of North America. In this world, North America is one unified state composed of the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Corporations purchase the naming rights to the calendar year, hence, for example, "The Year of Glad". Furthermore, what used to be the Northeastern United States has become a massive hazardous waste dumping site. The novel touches on themes as diverse as tennis; substance addiction and recovery programs; child abuse; advertising and popular entertainment; film and film theory; and Quebec separatism. The plot device unifying these disparate themes is a video tape, referred to in the novel as "the Entertainment", but titled "Infinite Jest" by its auteur. Only a smiley face identifies the cassette containing the tape. The video is so "entertaining" to its unwitting viewers that they become vegetables, with no interest in anything other than infinite viewings of the film. The novel derives its name, at least in part, from a line in Hamlet, in which the title character refers to Yorick as "a fellow of infinite jest".

Characters

The Incandenza Family

  • Avril Incandenza, ne Poutrincourt, is the domineering mother of the Incandenza children and wife to James. A beautiful Quebequoise, she becomes a major figure at the Enfield Tennis Academy after the death of her husband. She begins, or perhaps continues, a relationship with Charles Tavis, the new head of the academy, and her half brother. Her sexual relations are a matter of some discussion, with some hints that she has slept with, among others, John "No Relation" Wayne or perhaps even Orin. Her nickname among the family is The Moms.
  • Hal Incandenza is the youngest of the Incandeza children and is arguably the protagonist of the story, with events mainly centered around his time at the Enfield Tennis Academy. As prodigiously intelligent as the other members of his family, Hal is nonetheless insecure about his own abilities (and eventually, his own mental state), as well as having a difficult relationship with both his parents. In this regard, strong parallels can be drawn between him and the title character of Hamlet.
  • James O. Incandenza is the founder of the Enfield Tennis Academy and a filmmaker. He is the creator of the Entertainment (aka Infinite Jest or the samizdat). He had a strong degree of attachment to Joelle Van Dyne, using her in many of his films; the precise nature of this relationship (particularly whether or not it is platonic) remains uncertain. It is proposed that he can create and view the Entertainment without becoming entranced because at the time of its creation he is already insane. He appears in the book mainly either in flashbacks or as a ghost, having committed suicide by placing his head in a microwave oven. His nickname among the family is Himself.
  • Mario Incandenza is the intermediate child of the Incandenzas, although there is some insinuation in the novel that in fact he may be the child of Charles Tavis rather than James. Severely deformed since birth, he is nonetheless perenially cheerful. The typical relationship between Hal and him is reversed, with Hal playing the role of a supportive elder brother despite the age difference.
  • Orin Incandenza is the eldest son of the Incandenzas. He is a serial womaniser who plays professional football and is estranged from all members of the family except Hal. He met, and fell in love with, Joelle Van Dyne, (introducing her to his father), but later lost his attraction to her.

The Enfield Tennis Academy

  • Michael Pemulis
  • Ortho "The Darkness" Stice
  • John "No Relation" Wayne

The Ennet House Drug and Alcohol Recovery House

  • Don Gately is a former drug addict and current counselor in residence at the Ennet House. He is one of the central characters in the book, second only to Hal.
  • Joelle Van Dyne, aka Madame Psychosis on the radio (her on-air name a play on metempsychosis) ; aka the Prettiest Girl of All Time (or PGOAT), name given to her by Orin.
  • Kate Gompert

Les Assasins des Fauteuils Rollents

This is a group of Quebecois terrorists whose actions, motives, and goals are never made entirely clear. They are legless or otherwise crippled as the result of playing chicken with trains.

More on the Setting of the Story

Readers familiar with Brighton, Massachusetts will recognize that Enfield is largely a stand-in for Brighton. The pictures of Enfield and neighboring Allston that Wallace paints, however, seem to serve simply as points of contrast for the largely idyllic life of students at ETA.

 

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