Torpid Smoke: The Stories of Vladimir NabokovSteven G. Kellman, Irving Malin Rodopi, 2000 - 246 páginas From the contents: Memory and dream in Nabokov's short fiction (B. Wyllie). - Nabokov's approach to the supernatural in the early stories (J.W. Connoly). - Nabokov's Christmas stories (R.H.W. Dillard). - Art and marriage in Vladimir Nabokov's Music and in Lev Tolstoy's The Kreutzer sonata (N.W. Balestrini). - How they brought the bad news to Mints: Breaking the news (S.G. Kellman). - Alone in the void: Mademoiselle O (J.E. Rivers). - Nabokov's Vasily Shishkov: an author-text interpretation (M.D. Shrayer). - Ville scripts: games of double-crossing in Vladimir Nabokov's The assistant producer (C. Moraru). |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 23
Página 5
... force of time . The short story provided the perfect medium to address such a problem , demanding stylistic con- ciseness and structural discipline , whilst at the same time offering the freedom to experiment with and focus upon ...
... force of time . The short story provided the perfect medium to address such a problem , demanding stylistic con- ciseness and structural discipline , whilst at the same time offering the freedom to experiment with and focus upon ...
Página 8
... forces of memory and imagination can ultimately grant a form of spiritual immortality , but this is a state accessible only ... force in his art . The recurrence of themes of death in Nabokov's earliest work illustrates the extent of his ...
... forces of memory and imagination can ultimately grant a form of spiritual immortality , but this is a state accessible only ... force in his art . The recurrence of themes of death in Nabokov's earliest work illustrates the extent of his ...
Página 11
... force that intrudes on the living world , albeit unsuccessfully . In these early stories , Nabokov's notion of potustoronnost ( “ other worlds " or perhaps more definitively " other sides " ) is established as a fundamental aspect of ...
... force that intrudes on the living world , albeit unsuccessfully . In these early stories , Nabokov's notion of potustoronnost ( “ other worlds " or perhaps more definitively " other sides " ) is established as a fundamental aspect of ...
Página 12
... force . He is preoccupied by an elusive memory that haunts his days ; like Mark's dream , its ethereal quality belies the extent of its effect upon his consciousness . Governed by a sense of dislocation and isolation , which echoes that ...
... force . He is preoccupied by an elusive memory that haunts his days ; like Mark's dream , its ethereal quality belies the extent of its effect upon his consciousness . Governed by a sense of dislocation and isolation , which echoes that ...
Página 14
... force , but he rejects it in his " psychic blindness . " 27 The story is typical of Nabokov's cryptically sophisti- cated late works , in which " the first - person narrator is made , by accumulation of subtle detail , increasingly less ...
... force , but he rejects it in his " psychic blindness . " 27 The story is typical of Nabokov's cryptically sophisti- cated late works , in which " the first - person narrator is made , by accumulation of subtle detail , increasingly less ...
Índice
5 | |
21 | |
35 | |
Art and Marriage in Vladimir Nabokovs Music and in Lev Tol | 53 |
Mademoiselle O | 85 |
An AuthorText Interpretation | 133 |
Games of DoubleCrossing in Vladimir Nabokovs | 173 |
Nabokov and the Prism of Art | 189 |
Nabokovs Dostoyevskian | 203 |
Reading Madly | 219 |
The Vane Sisters and Nabokovs Subtle and Loving Readers | 229 |
Contributors | 245 |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Torpid Smoke: The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov Steven G. Kellman,Irving Malin Pré-visualização indisponível - 2000 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
Adamovich artistic Assistant Producer Brian Boyd character Charles Kinbote Christmas story cinematic colors consciousness critics Cynthia death describes dream Drugie Berega Easter Rain émigré English version essay Eugenia Isakovna exile eyes Fialta Forgotten Poet French text Gift governess hologram human imagery Khodasevich kov's Kreutzer Sonata language literary literature living Lolita Mademoiselle Mademoiselle's Maiden's Prayer memory metaphysical moth movie Nabo Nabokov's Dozen Nabokov's story narrative narrator narrator's novel Novodvortsev Pale Fire paragraph Paris passage Perov person poem Poems and Problems poetic poetry poshlost Pozdnyshev prose published reader reading reality Return of Chorb rhymes Russian émigré scene seems sense sentence short story Sirin Sleptsov sound Speak spirit Spring in Fialta Stikhi Stories of Vladimir story's Strong Opinions Sybil theme things tion Tolstoy Tolstoy's translation Vane Sisters Vasiliy Shishkov verse Victor vision Vladimir Nabokov Vladislav Khodasevich wife word writer York
Passagens conhecidas
Página 203 - Once upon a time there lived in Berlin, Germany, a man called Albinus. He was rich, respectable, happy; one day he abandoned his wife for the sake of a youthful mistress; he loved; was not loved; and his life ended in disaster.
Página 8 - There is, it would seem, in the dimensional scale of the world a kind of delicate meeting place between imagination and knowledge, a point, arrived at by diminishing large things and enlarging small ones, that is intrinsically artistic.
Página 166 - My private tragedy, which cannot, and indeed should not, be anybody's concern, is that I had to abandon my natural idiom, my untrammeled, rich, and infinitely docile Russian tongue for a second-rate brand of English, devoid of any of those apparatuses — the baffling mirror, the black velvet backdrop, the implied associations and traditions — which the native illusionist, frac-tails flying, can magically use to transcend the heritage in his own way.
Página 5 - I witness with pleasure the supreme achievement of memory, which is the masterly use it makes of innate harmonies when gathering to its fold the suspended and wandering tonalities of the past.
Página 184 - ... real" audiences in pictures. The dovetailing of one phantasm into another produced upon a sensitive person the impression of living in a Hall of Mirrors, or rather a prison of mirrors, and not even knowing which was the glass and which was yourself.