Nabokov, history and the texture of time

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Nabokov, history and the texture of time

Will Norman

(Routledge transnational perspectives on American literature, 19)

Routledge, 2017, c2012

  • : pbk

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

First published in hardback, 2012

Includes bibliographical references (p. [189]-200) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book argues that the apparent evasion of history in Vladimir Nabokov's fiction conceals a profound engagement with social, and therefore political, temporalities. While Nabokov scholarship has long assumed the same position as Nabokov himself - that his works exist in a state of historical exceptionalism - this study restores the content, context, and commentary to Nabokovian time by reading his American work alongside the violent upheavals of twentieth-century ideological conflicts in Europe and the United States. This approach explores how the author's characteristic temporal manipulations and distortions function as a defensive dialectic against history, an attempt to salvage fiction for autonomous aesthetics. Tracing Nabokov's understanding of the relationship between history and aesthetics from nineteenth-century Russia through European modernism to the postwar American academy, the book offers detailed contextualized readings of Nabokov's major writings, exploring the tensions, fissures, and failures in Nabokov's attempts to assert aesthetic control over historical time. In reading his response to the rise of totalitarianism, the Holocaust, and Cold War, Norman redresses the commonly-expressed admiration for Nabokov's heroic resistance to history by suggesting the ethical, aesthetic, and political costs of reading and writing in its denial. This book offers a rethinking of Nabokov's location in literary history, the ideological impulses which inform his fiction, and the importance of temporal aesthetics in negotiating the matrices of modernism.

Table of Contents

Preface 1. Nabokov in Literary History 2. The Real Life of Sebastian Knight and the Modernist Impasse 3. Nabokov, Benjamin and Historical Resistance 4. Totalitarian Time: The Struggle for Autonomy in Bend Sinister 5. Freudian Time: Lolita, Psychoanalysis and the Holocaust 6. Swiss Time: Cold War Pastoral in late Nabokov Conclusion: Reading Nabokov's Dialectics

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top