Vladimir Nabokov

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By MARYROSS , 31 March, 2020

I recently have come across the work of Northrop Frye, who was the prominent literary critic at the time that Pale Fire was written. I suspect that Pale Fire may be a parodic response to Frye’s Archetypal Literary Criticism. This would strongly support my theories of a Jungian substrate in PF. I wonder if anyone out there has studied ALC and if this seems to fit.

Mary

 

By William Dane , 25 March, 2020

From Virginia Woolf's "Rambling Round Evelyn" (1925) in The Common Reader (my emphasis):

"...that butterfly will sit motionless on the dahlia while the gardener trundles his barrow past it, but let him flick the wings with the shadow of a rake, and off it flies, up it goes, instantly on the alert. So, we may reflect, a butterfly sees but does not hear... But as for going into the house to fetch a knife and with that knife dissecting a Red Admiral's head... no sane person in the twentieth century would entertain such a project for a second."

By MARYROSS , 18 March, 2020

Here’s an interesting literary allusion I just accidentally discovered in Pale Fire.  I was reading F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Diamond Big as the Ritz,” a short story about a young man who is a guest at a preposterously fabulous remote diamond and gilt chateau. He awakes in the morning and after being undressed by a servant,

 

By matthew_roth , 17 March, 2020

Friends,

I'm wondering if anyone has guidance on how, going forward, we should be citing material from this list and the archives. In the past, our citations listed NABOKV-L as the container/publication. Now that all that material has been moved to thenabokovian.org, I'm not sure how to cite specific posts. If we had an official, standardized policy that we all could use, that would be helpful.

 

Matt Roth

By MARYROSS , 27 February, 2020

 

Has it ever been noted that Prince Charles (Kinbote) and his first love, Oleg may be half brothers? (Both sons of Col. Gusev)

 

It seems to me that Prince Charles’ mother, Blenda, and Colonel Gusev are intimated in an affaire and were likely in cahoots with the airplane crash demise of King Alfin (sort of a Hamlet scenario). Kinbote is likely the son of Gusev.

 

See attached diagram

 

 

 

By synve_taxt_mage , 21 February, 2020

Having not read much Nabokov criticism yet, I am still mostly indebted to annotators online, and one astute contributor on genius, points out that that lemniscate "is a standard meteorological symbol for haze", connecting to the poet's desire for his daughter Hazel's soul to be eternal.

Haze generally is a phenomenon of obfuscation, a grey filter inhibiting vision and clarity, composed of dry particles such as smoke, dust, (stardust?) and sand (the latter a unit of time, a thousand years ago). 

By matthew_roth , 18 February, 2020

As someone said, an interesting association belatedly realized:

 

1. PF: "the three conjoined lakes called Omega, Ozero, and Zero"

 

2. "Signs and Symbols": "I will tell you what you are doing; you are turning to the letter O instead of the zero."

 

By matthew_roth , 7 February, 2020

I just came across a recent publication:

Living through Literature: Essays in Memory of Omry Ronen, Upsalla University, 2019.

It contains three essays on VN:

Nabokov's First English Language Novel in the Context of the Anglo-American Prose of His Contemporaries, by Irena Ronen

Kinbote's Remorse, by Nancy Pollak

The Pleasure of Translingual Punning: Homage to Nabokov in Olga Grushin's The Dream Life of Sukhanov, by Julie Hansen

Here is the link to the full-text online: https://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1268970/FULLTEXT01.pdf

By matthew_roth , 24 January, 2020

Dear List,

While rooting around in the list archives, I happened on a 2006 post from the late, great Stan Kelly-Bootle (we miss you, Stan!) where he checked VN's math from the following passage in SM, and found it correct: