Jansy Mello: When, in her
posting about American "freedom," Emily Sours
questions blogger D.G.Meyers's misuse of Nabokov, she considers [
: - ) ] his "twisting of words
the most interesting." Perhaps "interesting" remains
too neutral when it's applied to Meyers's word-wringing and
thought-mangling contextualizations that justify this Eqwilistic
inheritance. Nabokov's propositions my also suffer a
sea-change by being drowned in religious and moralistic arguments,
as in ( http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Art+and+ardor%3a+the+presence+of+the+divine+in+the+poetry+and+prose+of...-a0253058121 ) "Art and Ardor: The Presence of the Divine in
Nabokov's Poetry and Prose," by Clifford R.Garner. The author argues
that, althought Nabokov has been grouped with the late 20th century
postmodernist writers who express "a post-Darwinian vision of
both life and art, devoid of any spiritual dimension," such a label
is incorrect because, for Nabokov, not only "art and
thought, manner and matter, are inseparable" but his oeuvre
is also"indicative of the old-fashioned desire for human value and felt life and
potustoronnost--what Nabokov called 'beauty plus pity.' Nabokov's great
achievement is to fully realize art alongside ardor." Although Garner's
general ideas and conclusions seem agree with what
most Nabokovians encounter in his interviews and novels, the
manner by which the matter is developed by Garner strikes me as
ideologically miguided, flat and devoid of humor and ambiguities.A
couple of lines in RLSK serves as an example:"As often was the way with Sebastian Knight he used
parody as a kind of springboard for leaping into the highest region of serious
emotion. J. L. Coleman has called it 'al clown developing wings, an angel
mimicking a tumbler pigeon', and the metaphor seems to me very
apt." Fortunately our Nab-L Forum is another
expression of American freedom (no quotes here) in which opinions are
exchanged as simple opinions to forward learning
and discussion.
.............................................................................................................................................................................................
* Literary Blog : A Useful List of Useful Idiots, by D. G.
Myers [10.19.2011]
"In Bend Sinister, Nabokov’s 1947 novel about political tyranny, the
philosopher Adam Krug is asked to sign an oath of loyalty to the régime. “Legal
documents excepted, and not all of them at that,” he says, “I never have signed,
nor ever shall sign, anything not written by myself.” This simple confession of
faith in individual expression ought to be on the desk of every working writer.
A lot of contemporary American writers, however, believe in something a lot more
important. As of this morning, nearly a thousand of them have eagerly signed the
latest oath:We, the undersigned writers and all who will join us, support Occupy
Wall Street and the Occupy Movement around the world....The list of writers
reads like a social register of the current literary elite. A list of the major
American writers who refused to sign the oath would be much smaller — not only
because there aren’t too many major American writers now working, but also
because no one seems to consider a Nabokov-like statement of refusal worth
making..."
"Freedom of speech, freedom of thought, freedom of art: there is the only
political creed which can unite all writers into a political party. Many
prominent American writers have lost interest in freedom, however, and have
become obsessed with a world that is divided between rich and poor. Small
wonder, then, that more and more readers are losing interest in them...The
murderous political tyrant in Nabokov’s Bend Sinister upholds the doctrine of
Ekwilism....Krug, an exceptional man, [should]swear allegiance to a political
régime founded upon hostility to the exceptional. They demand he submit to a
political system dedicated to “a remolding of human individuals in conformity
with a well-balanced pattern.”Almost a thousand of the best contemporary writers
have now joined the Ekwilist party, eagerly supporting the goals of radical
leftist tyranny. It’s good, at least, to have them listed in one
place."