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Gazetteer
Vineland, NJ -- U.S. city in New Jersey
Population (2000): 56271
Housing Units (2000): 20958
Land area (2000): 68.689823 sq. miles (177.905818 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.285362 sq. miles (0.739084 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 68.975185 sq. miles (178.644902 sq. km)
FIPS code: 76070
Located within: New Jersey (NJ), FIPS 34
Location: 39.480415 N, 75.014013 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 08360
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Vineland, NJ
Vineland
Vineland, MN -- U.S. Census Designated Place in Minnesota
Population (2000): 607
Housing Units (2000): 189
Land area (2000): 6.532505 sq. miles (16.919110 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.119072 sq. miles (0.308395 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 6.651577 sq. miles (17.227505 sq. km)
FIPS code: 67180
Located within: Minnesota (MN), FIPS 27
Location: 46.181609 N, 93.759169 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Vineland, MN
Vineland
Wikipedia
Vineland

Vineland is a 1990 novel by Thomas Pynchon, a postmodern fiction set in California, United States in 1984, the year of Ronald Reagan's reelection. Through flashbacks by its characters, who have lived the sixties in their youth, the story accounts for the free spirit of rebellion of that decade, and describes the traits of the "fascistic Nixonian repression" and its War on Drugs that clashed with it; and it articulates the slide and transformation that occurred in U.S. society from the 1960s to the 1980s.

Vineland (disambiguation)

Vineland may refer to:

  • Vinland, the Viking colony in North America
  • Vineland, a novel by Thomas Pynchon

Usage examples of "vineland".

Shape-ups were held in the predawn down by the Vineland courthouse, shadowy brown buses idling in the dark, work and wages posted silently in the windows some mornings Zoyd had gone down, climbed on, ridden out with other newcomers, all cherry to the labor market up here, former artists or spiritual pilgrims now becoming choker setters, waiters and waitresses, baggers and checkout clerks, tree workers, truckdrivers, and framers, or taking temporary swamping jobs like this, all in the service of others, the ones who did the building, selling, buying and speculating.

His partner, Van Meter, was calling from the Cucumber Lounge, a notorious Vineland County roadhouse, in high agitation.

They were sitting at a table in the rear of the restaurant at Vineland Lanes, Zoyd after a lot of lost sleep having decided to show up after all.

Zoyd had only missed him that night by not showing up at the Lost Nugget, his usual hangout, having chosen instead a booth way in the back of the Steam Donkey, just off the old Plaza in Vineland, a bar that dated well back into the fog of the last century.

Zoyd hustled use of the office phone to call Doc Deeply on the direct line in to his wing of the Vineland Palace.

Feeling unprotected on all flanks, Zoyd went speeding in, running lights and ignoring stop signs, to Vineland, where he just made it to the door of the bank at closing time.

Zoyd kept driving, found a public phone, and called Doc Deeply at the Vineland Palace.

IWW hall in Vineland, where they knew some fellows, and the minute Eula walked in, there he was, and as she found out not long after, the real Eula Becker too.

The girl made a point of looking at her watch, a multicolored plastic model from a Vineland swap meet.

Ortho Bob was heading back up to the Thanatoid village at the confluence of Shade Creek and Seventh River, in Vineland County.

Once past the lights of Vineland, the river took back its older form, became what for the Yuroks it had always been, a river of ghosts.

As crops in the sun grew fatter, flowered, more densely aromatic, as resinous breezes swept out of the gulches to scent the town day and night, the sky over Vineland County, which had allowed the bringing of life, now began to reveal a potential for destroying it.

Downtown, in the Greyhound station, Zoyd put Prairie on top of a pinball machine with a psychedelic motif, called Hip Trip, and was able to keep winning free games till the Vineland bus got in from L.

Vineland, all the geometry of the bay neutrally filtered under pre-storm clouds, the crystalline openwork arcs of the pale bridges, a tall power-plant stack whose plume blew straight north, meaning rain on the way, a jet in the sky ascending from Vineland International south of town, the Corps of Engineers marina, with salmon boats, power cruisers, and day sailers all docked together, and spilling uphill from the shoreline a couple of square miles crowded with wood Victorian houses, Quonset sheds, postwar prefab ranch and split-level units, little trailer parks, lumber-baron floridity, New Deal earnestness.

They could be seen in photographs beginning at about the turn of the century, villagers watching the photographer at work, often posed in native gear before silvery blurred vistas, black tips of seamounts emerging from gray sea fringed in brute-innocent white breakings, basalt cliffs like castle ruins, the massed and breathing redwoods, alive forever, while the light in these pictures could be seen even today in the light of Vineland, the rainy indifference with which it fell on surfaces, the call to attend to territories of the spirit.