EDNote: The
following papers were presented at the 2007 Louisville Conference on
Literature and Culture Since 1900 (Feb. 22-24). ~SB
G-13 Approaches
to Lolita (Panel organized by Marianne Cotogno, International
Vladimir Nabokov Society)
Friday,
3:15 - 4:45 p.m. Room: 219
Chair: Marianne
Cotugno, Miami University, Ohio
Mark S. Graybill, Widener
University
‟Voyeurism, Repression, Narcissistic
Narrative: The Case of Lolita”
Laura Christie, University of
Roehampton, England
‟The Fragmented Daughter: Dialogic
Comparisons between the 'Voices' of the Daughters in Nabokov's Fiction,
and the
Female Case Studies of Freud and Ferenczi”
Paul Kerschen, University of
California, Berkeley
‟Allegory and Tyranny in Nabokov: Bend
Sinister to Lolita”
H-1 Transatlantic
Crossing: European-American Literary Relations, 1945-1960 (Prearranged
Panel organized by Sarah
Relyea)
Sarah Relyea, Brooklyn, New
York
‟Border Crossings in Nabokov's Glory and
Lolita”
I-7 Memory
Joseph Bates, University of
Cincinnati
‟Mnemosyne and Manipulation: Memory,
Time, and Consciousness as Literary Constructions in Vladimir Nabokov's
Speak, Memory”
I-13 The
Nabokovian Landscape (Panel organized by Marianne Cotogno,
International Vladimir Nabokov Society)
Saturday, 10:45 -
12:15 pm Room: 217
Chair: Marianne
Cotugno, Miami University, Ohio
Juan Martinez, University of
Nevada
‟Nabokovilia: Nabokov References in
Contemporary Fiction”
Samuel Schuman, University of
New Mexico
‟The Mimosa and the Nevsy: Landscape in
Nabokov's Art”
Marianne Cotugno, Miami
University
‟On the Road with Lolita”
Lars Erik Larson, University of
Portland
‟Lolita's Desire Lines: Humbert in
the Two-Way Road of America”