Writing in three languages (French, Russian and English) and on
three continents, Vladimir Nabokov (below) enjoyed a career
spanning more than 50 years. His body of work is a testament to
the power of memory triumphing over both loss and emigration. In
this seminar, the director of The New York Public Library's
Humanities and Social Sciences Library,
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NYPL, Berg Collection |
Rodney
Phillips, and writer Sarah Funke explore Nabokov's public life and
career through his surviving manuscripts, notes, lectures and
photographs.
Born to a wealthy and prominent family in St. Petersburg in
1899, Nabokov developed a love of poetry, a passion for
butterflies and a fascination with and mastery of languages in his
childhood, and these life-long interests would all figure
prominently in his prolific body of work. Exiled from his homeland
when he was 20, Nabokov continued to write many stories and novels
in his mother tongue. Decades later, he translated much of this
work into English, often in collaboration with his son Dmitri. In
1940, he left the tumultuous political climate of Europe, hoping
to make a name for himself with an American audience. For 20 years
Nabokov supported his family by teaching at Wellesley College and
Cornell University; but with the slow-building but eventually
worldwide success of his controversial novel Lolita,
Nabokov was able to devote his life solely to writing--and
butterfly hunting. His large body of English-language works, as
well as the translations of his early Russian short stories and
novels, then began to garner increasing critical attention--both
staunch praise and severe criticism.
Based on selections from The New York Public Library's
extensive Vladimir Nabokov Archive, this seminar examines
Nabokov's early writings and influences; his experiences with
book, magazines and journal publishing in both Europe and America;
and his "other" careers as a teacher and a lepidopterist.