Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0009925, Sun, 27 Jun 2004 15:09:22 -0700

Subject
NABOKOV 101 at Saint Peterburg Nabokov Museun
Date
Body
EDNOTE. This is an excellent program that I have participated in both as and auditor. The instructors this summer are two of the world's leading Nabokov scholars: Alexander Dolinin, editor of the definitive Russian edition of VN
, and Maurice Couturier , editor of the elegant Pleiade edition. This will be a rare chance to see two very different approaches to the understanding of Nabokov's work. In English; in the Nabokov family home.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Nabokov 101
International Summer School for Nabokov Students

August 2-10, 2004
GENERAL INFORMATION
On August 2-10, 2004 Vladimir Nabokov Museum, St.Petersburg will =
hold its fifth International Summer School for Nabokov students. It will =
be conducted at the Nabokov Museum which is located at 47 Bolshaya =
Morskaya Street in St.Petersburg, the place Vladimir Nabokov described =
as "the only house in the world". Our teachers this year will be Prof. =
Maurice Couturier (France) and Prof. Alexander Dolinin (USA). =20
The purpose of the Nabokov Summer School is to provide students =
from all over the world with the opportunity to study various aspects of =
Vladimir Nabokov's art with internationally known Nabokov scholars. =
The atmosphere of the Nabokov House, which appears in many of Nabokov =
novels and is lovingly described in "Speak, Memory", turns these =
scholarly sessions into an unforgettable personal experience for both =
students and teachers.

COURSES"The Poetics of Desire in Nabokov's Fiction"
Maurice Couturier
Professor Emeritus, University of Nice
Presentation
In this seminar the lecturer will undertake to show how desire, and its =
common counterpart cruelty, contribute to creating an exceptionally =
strong aesthetic experience in the case of Nabokov's novels. Desire is =
not to be understood merely as sexual, though its sexual component is =
important; as Jacques Lacan put it in The Seminar, Book II, "Desire is =
the splicing of being and lack. This lack is properly a lack of being". =
Desire is therefore at the heart of such key philosophical problems as =
selfhood, subjecthood for Lacan. The Lacanian doxa, which will =
constitute the chief theoretical grid in this seminar, will be used not =
to analyze the "real author" (whatever that is) but to develop a new =
understanding of the novels and to promote a richer aesthetic =
appreciation of them.=20
The participants in this seminar with have to be conversant with =
Nabokov's fiction but will need no prior knowledge of Lacanian theory. =
The concepts will be explained when required for the understanding of =
the texts. The emphasis will be on three novels which belong to three =
different periods in Nabokov's career, King, Queen, Knave, Invitation to =
a Beheading and Lolita.=20

Corpus
King, Queen, Knave. New York=A0: Vintage.
Invitation to a Beheading. New York: Vintage.
The Annotated Lolita. New York: Vintage.

Reading List
Alexandrov, Vladimir E. Nabokov's Otherworld. Princeton: Princeton U. =
P., 1991.
Boyd, Brian. Vladimir Nabokov, Vols. 1 and 2. London: Chatto & Windus, =
1991 and 1991.
Couturier, Maurice. Nabokov, ou la tyrannie de l'auteur. Paris: Ed. du =
Seuil, 1993.
-----------------------. Roman et censure ou la mauvaise foi d'Eros. =
Seyssel: Champ Vallon, 1996.
Freud, Sigmund. Three Esssays on the Theory of Sexuality. In On =
Sexuality. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1977.
Danto, Arthur. After the End of Art: Contemporary Art and the Pale of =
History. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1997.
Green, Geoffrey. Freud and Nabokov. Lincoln, Neb.: University of =
Nebraska Press, 1988.
Lacan, Jacques. The Seminar of Lacan, Book II: The Ego in Freud's =
Theory. New York: W. W. Norton, 1991.
------------------. The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis. New =
York: W. W. Norton, 1998.
-------------------. The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book XX. New York: W. =
W. Norton, 1999.
Rabatt=E9, Jean-Michel, ed. The Cambridge Companion to Lacan. Cambridge =
University Press, 2003.-----------------------------------------------------------------------
"After The Gift"
Alexander Dolinin
Professor, University of Wisconsin-Madison
The course will focus on Nabokov's work of the late 1930s which =
witnessed the author's gradual transition from Russian into English. =20

Corpus
The Real Life of Sebastian Knight
The Visit To The Museum
Tyrants Destroyed
Lik
Vasiliy Shishkov
Solus Rex
Ultima Thule
The Enchanter
Plays:
The Event
The Waltz Invention

The reading-list will be provided to the students after April 15.
LANGUAGE English is the main language of the program. All classes and =
guided tours will be conducted in English.

TUITION Students are required to pay their own tuition, travel =
costs, and living expenses (food and lodging). The Nabokov 101 tuition =
cost is $400, which will cover participation in seminars, coffee-breaks, =
handouts, use of museum computers and Internet access at the Nabokov =
Museum, use of museum library.=20

GRADES AND CERTIFICATES After completing the program, the students will =
receive a Nabokov 101 Certificate and, if required, a personal letter of =
recommendation from the professor.=20

TIME AND CURRICULUM Seminars will begin on August 2 (Monday) and =
continue through August 10 (Tuesday) with one day-off in the middle of =
the program. There will be 8 days of seminars in all, with two 1 =BD =
hour seminars every day. In addition, guided tours of Nabokov sites and =
other literary points of interest in St.Petersburg, trips to museums and =
galleries, and other sightseeing activities will be offered every day. =
On Saturday, August 7, students and teachers will have a chance to go on =
a day-long guided tour to the Nabokov Estates near St.Petersburg


SCHEDULE

10:00-11:30 Prof. Couturier's seminar.=20
11:30-12:00 Coffee-break
12:00-13:30Prof. Dolinin's seminar.
13:30-14:30 Lunch(optional)
14:30-18:00 Guided tour (optional). Work at the library, homework, =
individual research.=20


PROGRAM COSTS=20
=20
* Tuition $ 400


* Visa invitation processing =
$35

* Accommodation in St.Petersburg *=09
Private apartment or pension $15-60 =
a day
Hotel =
$60-100 a day
=20
* Housing registration (applicable for private
apartments and small hotels) $25

=09

* Lunches (optional) =
$3-8 a day

* Guided tours (optional) =
$5-30 per tour


*Accomodation will be arranged by the Museum at the student's request.

APPLICATION AND PAYMENT =09
Students can apply by writing to Tatyana Ponomareva, Museum Director at =
vnabokov@mail.wplus.net


The payment can be made in cash or in traveler's checks on student's =
arrival in St.Petersburg. No advance payment is required but the =
students who cancel their participation after the visa invitation has =
been issued for them will have to reimburse the museum for its cost =
($35).=20















Attachment