EDNote: Our thanks to Don Johnson for providing the following. If
participants could provide abstracts of their papers for list
distribution, it would be most appreciated.
Third International Conference on
Nabokov
June 21-23, 2006
Centre Université Méditerranéen (Nice)
Topic of the conference: “Annotating
vs. Interpreting Nabokov”
Wednesday, June 21
Official opening at 9 o’clock.
- Ellen Pifer, University of Delaware,
“A Finding: the Real Key to Lolita: A Modest Proposal”
- Alexander Dolinin, University
of Wisconsin in Madison,
“Nabokov’s Paratexts and the
Authorial Intention: a Case of Lolita”
- Susan Elizabeth Sweeney, HolyCrossCollege, “’Had I
Come Before Myself’:
Illegitimate Judgments in Nabokov”
- Tatyana Pomareva, Director of the NabokovMuseum
in Saint-Petersburg, “The NabokovMuseum: Present
and
Future”
Public session (in French): 3 pm, main auditorium
- Jeff Edmunds, Editor of Zembla, PennsylvaniaStateUniversity,
« Nabokov à l’âge
d’internet »
- Brian Boyd, University of Auckland, New Zealand, « Lolita de
Nabokov :
Evidences et énigmes ».
Thursday, June 22
Morning session: 9 o’clock
- Galya Diment, University
of Washington in Seattle,
“Vladimir Nabokov and Early Silent
Film”
- D. Barton Johnson, University
of California in Santa Barbara, “Van’s ‘Last Tango’, in Ada:
A Song and two films”
- Geoffrey Green, San FranciscoUniversity,
“The Man in the Mirror: Considering Alfred Hitchcock as a Model toward
resolving Vertigo (1958) of Annotation vs. Interpretation in
Nabokov’s Lolita
(1955)
- Delage-Teriel, Lara, University of Strasbourg,
“Disclosures under Seal: Nabokov, Secrecy and the Reader”
Thursday afternoon:2.30 pm
- Gennady Barabtarlo, University of Missouri,
“A Good Knight – for Nothing”
- John Burt Foster, GeorgeMasonUniversity,
“Framing
Nabokov: Modernism, Multiculturalism, World Literature”
- Monica Manolescu, “University of Paris
7, “Verbal Adventures in the Inky Jungle: Marco Polo and Mandeville in
the
Gift”
- Jenefer Coates, “Translation and Intertextuality”
- Andrey Babikov, “On Germination of the Nabokov
‘Main
Theme’ in his Story ‘Natasha’”
- David Rampton, “University
of Ottawa, “Nabokov and the
Passions
of Reading”
Friday, June 23
Morning session: 9.00
- Julian W. Connolly, University of Virginia,
“The Challenge of Interpreting and Decoding Nabokov’s Work: Strategies
and
Suggestions”
- Zoran Kuzmanovich, DavidsonCollege,
“Legitimizing Belief and Critical Practice, or, Reading Nabokov as if
Differences
Mattered”
- Priscilla Meyer, WesleyanUniversity,
“Life as Annotation”
- Michael Wood, PrincetonUniversity,
“The Figure in the Crypt”
Friday afternoon
Public lecture:4.00pm
David Lodge, novelist, “Nabokov and the Campus
Novel”
(“Nabokov et le roman
universitaire”). With simultaneous
translation.
8 p.m. Gala Dinner at “Le Palais de la
Méditerranée”