20 research outputs found
The Will to Disempower? Nabokov and his Readers
Rodgers argues that aspects of Nietzscheâs philosophyâspecifically âmaster-slave moralityâ and the âwill to powerââcan articulate the interplay between author and reader in Nabokovâs work. Informed by Bernard Reginsterâs interpretation of the will to power as the âactivity of overcoming resistance,â the chapter claims that the disempowering distinction between elevated author and subjugated reader in Nabokovâs fiction engenders a readerly resistance. Rodgers illustrates this distinction by drawing on Nabokovâs published university lectures, on the epigraph and foreword to his novel Invitation to a Beheading, and on his short story âThe Vane Sisters.â âThe Will to Disempower? Nabokov and His Readersâ focuses on the risks of readerly resistance as well as its empowering implications for âNietzschean readers,â those who are conscious of Nabokovâs textual practice