[[Apologies for the garbled version of this that went out yesterday--an e-hiccup, I guess/SB]]

Marina Grishakov is the author of The Models of Space, Time and Vision in V. Nabokov’s Fiction: Narrative Strategies and Cultural Frames. Tartu: Tartu UP, 2006. ~SB


-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [NABOKV-L] TRANS-NAB: questions to Blackwell and de la Durantaye
Date: Wed, 08 Aug 2007 23:35:51 +0300
From: Marina Grishakova <marina2@ut.ee>
To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum <NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU>
References: <46B9120B.4080006@utk.edu>

May I very humbly add a quotation from my recently published book on
Nabokov's scientific and artistic models
(www.kriso.ee/cgi-bin/shop/9949113067.html) to the discussion.
Marina Grishakova
(p. 53, "Nabokov as a writer and a scientist")

"Nabokov incorporates the elements of scholarly commentary, geographical
description or entomological and botanical classi­fication into his
fiction. Robert Michael Pyle draws attention to the artistic quality of
Nabokov’s scientific style (Boyd & Pyle 2000: 69–70). Likewise, there is
every reason to speak of the “theoretical” quality — exactness,
self-reflexive and experimental character of his fiction. Nevertheless,
while admitting a similarity, Nabokov repudiated a possibility of
amalgamation of literary and scientific languages: “... whenever I
allude to butterflies in my novels, no matter how diligently I rework
the stuff, it remains pale and false and does not really express what I
want to express — what, indeed, it can only express in the special
scientific terms of my entomological papers” (/Strong Opinions/,136).


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