02.04.04 Friday | N 12 2004 | |
Vladimir Nabokov / Photo: MN Archive
Created: 02.04.2004 14:26 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 16:12 MSK , 51 minutes ago
MosNews
The son of famous Russian writer Vladimir Nabokov has criticized
media reports that Nabokov’s best known novel, “Lolita,” was plagiarized from a
1916 novel by a German journalist Heinz von Eschwege, the Guardian newspaper
wrote on Friday.
Michael Marr, a German literary scholar, suggested that
a novella, Lolita, written in 1916 by Heinz von Eschwege, may have provided the
foundations for the 1955 Nabokov novel. Von Eschwege, he discovered, wrote under
the name Von Lichberg and became a noted journalist in the Third Reich. The 1916
Lolita features an affair between a middle aged man and a 12-year old girl, like
Nabokov’s novel. The pair have a passionate affair, then Lolita dies, breaking
the older man’s heart.
Dmitri Nabokov, the son of Vladimir, said in an
email to a distinguished Nabokov critic, Dieter Zimmer, that the allegation was
“either a journalistic tempest in a teacup or a deliberate mystification”.
He called the 916 novel a “short piece written by a journalist", and
said that it “appears to be junk”.
He added that said his father, who
wrote in Russian, English and French, spoke “practically no German”.
“Contrary to what a lot of hacks are saying, there are no similarities
of name except for Lolita. The plot is one of the handful of basic plots on
which all literature is based,” Dmitri Nabokov writes in a letter to Guardian.
He then asks for advice to help him “quell this claptrap”.