Yoyodyne

Last updated
Yoyodyne
First appearance1963
Created by Thomas Pynchon
LocationSan Narciso, California
OwnerClayton "Bloody" Chiclitz
PurposeAerospace industry

Yoyodyne is a fictional company featured in Thomas Pynchon's novels, most prominently in The Crying of Lot 49 , and humorously referenced in various other media.

Contents

Background

Yoyodyne was first introduced as a fictional defense contractor in Pynchon's debut novel V. (1963) and featured prominently in his novella The Crying of Lot 49 (1966). [1] Described in the latter book as "a giant of the aerospace industry," Yoyodyne was founded by World War II veteran Clayton "Bloody" Chiclitz. The company has a large manufacturing plant in the fictional town of San Narciso, California. The name is reminiscent of several real high-tech companies, including the Gyrodyne Company of America, Teledyne and Teradyne, all of which were founded a few years before Pynchon wrote The Crying of Lot 49, and Rocketdyne, an aerospace company that manufactured, among other things, propulsion systems.

The name comes from "yoyo", a repetitive motion, and "dyne", a unit of force. [2] According to Gyu Han Kang, it "symbolizes the destructive force of sameness and artificially structured order". [2]

Joseph W. Slade suggests that Yoyodyne was based on Pynchon's time working for Boeing. [3] [1]

Reception and analysis

Ralph Clare notes that Yoyodyne is typical of companies depicted by Pynchon that "appear rather banal, represented not primarily by management and corporate hatchet men but by frustrated salaried employees in their natural cubicle-habitat". [4] It is further noted that although "there has been no physical violence perpetrated by Yoyodyne against its workers or the community", the company "dispossesses people nonetheless" through "entitlement to its workers' patents", thereby turning the process of inventorship from one of creativity to another form of assembly-line drudgery. [4]

Demonstrating how Pynchon uses Yoyodyne as an example of stifling innovation, Cyrus Patell writes: "The corporations that employ these inventors stress the value of 'team-work,' but for [Stanley] Koteks 'teamwork' is nothing but 'a way to avoid responsibility ... a symptom of the gutlessness of the whole society'" [5] He also notes, "Yoyodyne follows the prototypical evolutionary pattern of a business within a culture of corporate capitalism: begun by an individual entrepreneur, it soon grows into a large entrenched bureaucracy that is hostile to individual initiative and inventiveness". [5]

Slade explains that the company is an example of a contradiction in values Pynchon presents in The Crying of Lot 49: "Yoyodyne ... manufactures destructive high-tech weapons but markets them in classical capitalist fashion, as if they were ordinary industrial products". [3]

Legacy and influence

In fiction

Yoyodyne has frequently been referenced as an "in-joke" in other media. [6] [7] For example:

In technical disciplines

In June 1991 version 2 of the open-source license GNU General Public License used the fictional company name "Yoyodyne, Inc." as an example grantor of the license. [9] [ non-primary source needed ]

Real-world companies named Yoyodyne

Yoyodyne was an Internet-based direct marketer, founded by Seth Godin and later joined by Mark Hurst, and acquired by Yahoo! on October 12, 1998. [10] [11] [12] Godin took the name from the company in The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension . [13]

A company named Yoyodyne LLC, based in Morristown, New Jersey, is a retailer of aftermarket motorcycle parts, including self-branded clutch accessories. [14] [ non-primary source needed ]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 Sanburn, Josh (2011-01-21). "V. | Top 10 Books with One-Letter Titles". Time. ISSN   0040-781X . Retrieved 2023-10-09.
  2. 1 2 Kang, Gyu Han (Winter 2009). "Going Beyond Binary Disposition of 0/1: Rethinking the Question of Technology" . The Midwest Quarterly . 50 (2). ProQuest   804204881 . Retrieved 2023-10-09 via ProQuest.
  3. 1 2 Slade, Joseph W. (1990). Thomas Pynchon. Peter Lang. pp. xvi, 120. ISBN   9780820410319.
  4. 1 2 Clare, Ralph (2014-09-11). Fictions Inc.: The Corporation in Postmodern Fiction, Film, and Popular Culture. Rutgers University Press. ISBN   978-0-8135-6589-7.
  5. 1 2 Patell, Cyrus R. K. (2001). Pease, Donald E. (ed.). Negative Liberties: Morrison, Pynchon, and the Problem of Liberal Ideology. Duke University Press. p. 144. ISBN   9780822380672.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Mark J. P. Wolf, Building Imaginary Worlds: The Theory and History of Subcreation (2014), p. 219, 366.
  7. 1 2 3 Bill van Heerden, Film and Television In-Jokes (2015), p. 225.
  8. 1 2 Keith Topping, Hollywood Vampire: The Apocalypse (2012), p. 82.
  9. "GNU General Public License version 2 | Open Source Initiative". 31 October 2006.
  10. "Yahoo! Inc. - Company Timeline". Wayback Machine . 2008-07-13. Archived from the original on July 13, 2008. Retrieved 2016-07-19.
  11. Yahoo Acquiring Yoyodyne Archived March 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  12. Sullivan, Jennifer (12 October 1998). "Yahoo Acquiring Yoyodyne". Wired. ISSN   1059-1028. Archived from the original on 11 March 2007. Retrieved 10 October 2023.
  13. Yee, Bernard (September 1996). "Joyriding: Play Games on the Internet and Win Big Prizes". Next Generation . No. 21. Imagine Media. p. 27.
  14. "Yoyodyne supplies special racing parts for road racing and drag racing motorcycles".

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