5 research outputs found

    Practicing Nostalgia: Time and Memory in Nabokov\u27s Early Russian Fiction

    Get PDF
    Nabokov\u27s earliest Russian fiction reveals his lifelong preoccupation with time and his complex strategies for preserving heightened moments of experience. Dissatisfied with the brevity of involuntary (Proustian) recall, his émigré protagonists strive to inhabit their Russian past more fully through a painstaking process of aesthetic re-creation. Beginning with a handful of vivid recollections, the hero of Mary gradually fabricates a past that is more intensely real than the original. Nabokov\u27s most mature characters, however, recognize the solipsistic danger and utility of living in a vanished mental paradise. Turning to the present, they find unexpected beauty in the arrangement of ordinary objects in Berlin. In order both to intensify these perceptions and to memorialize them, the heroes of Torpid Smoke and A Guide to Berlin adopt a remarkable strategy: projecting themselves into an imagined future, they view the scene before them as if it were already a memory. This ocular adjustment endows the perceived objects with a radiance, fixity, and relief that they would acquire (and lose) only in a moment of extraordinary recall; but this act simultaneously preserves the impression indelibly when it becomes part of the actual past. In short, by anticipating and accelerating time\u27s destructive movement, by practicing nostalgia for the past while it is yet present, these individuals arrest the process of forgetting

    D.H. Lawrence's plural jurisprudence: an enquiry into Desmond Manderson's post-positivist ‘law and literature’

    No full text

    Bibliography

    No full text
    corecore