Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0017365, Fri, 21 Nov 2008 13:32:20 -0200

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Re: VN on allegory?
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R.S.Gwyn: I recall reading some dismissive remarks that VN made about allegory as a literary mode, but I can't recall where. Does anyone remember where this was? Probably in the Lectures on Literature, but I just can't remember in what context he said these remarks.

JM: A quick search in my archives:
Lolita - (VN) "Although everybody should know that I detest symbols and allegories (which is due partly to my old feud with Freudian voodooism and partly to my loathing of generalizations devised by literary mythists and sociologists), an otherwise intelligent reader who flipped through the first part described Lolita as "Old Europe debauching young America," while another flipper saw in it "Young America debauching old Europe."

ADA: "Osberg (Spanish writer of pretentious fairy tales and mystico-allegoric anecdotes, highly esteemed by short-shift thesialists) as well as that of an obscene ancient Arab, expounder of anagrammatic dreams, Ben Sirine..."

Van: dreams cannot yield any semblance of morality or symbol or allegory or Greek myth, unless, naturally, the dreamer is a Greek or a mythicist. Metamorphoses in dreams are as common as metaphors in poetry. A writer who likens, say, the fact of imagination's weakening less rapidly than memory, to the lead of a pencil getting used up more slowly than its erasing end, is comparing two real, concrete, existing things.

Demon: Bosch evidently found a wing or two in the corner cobweb of his casement and showed the prettier upper surface in depicting his incorrectly folded insect. I mean I don't give a hoot for the esoteric meaning, for the myth behind the moth, for the masterpiece-baiter who makes Bosch express some bosh of his time, I'm allergic to allegory and am quite sure he was just enjoying himself by crossbreeding casual fancies just for the fun of the contour and color...

Darkbloom: Carte du Tendre: 'Map of Tender Love', sentimental allegory of the seventeenth century.

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