EDNOTE. Alexander Dolinin is the editor of the
Symposium edition of Nabokov's collected works and the author of innumerable
articles about VN and other writers. He teaches at the University of
Wisconsin.
Mr. Shapiro's strange attack betrays an ardent but naive
mind that reads tropes literally and takes every argument for argumentum ad
hominem. I am afraid that for a professor of literature, it is a liability. The
more sophisticated reader, I hope, would easily understand that in my essay I
don't discuss Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov's personal problems, tragedies,
challenges and choices. What interests me is the "model author" or, better, two
"model authors" that happened to be named "Sirin" and "Nabokov," two differently
constructed personae, and their strategies in the changing literary field (to
use Bourdieu's term). I do question the Nabokov myth but not Nabokov's genius
and integrity, nor "achievements of Nabokov scholarship." I am sorry for Mr.
Shapiro who is still haunted by ghosts of the "infamous Soviet journalistic
lingo" but at the same time cries hard upon a first sign of demythologization,
calling me and my piece resentful, virulent, malevolent, slanderous, deceitful,
disgraceful, cruel and truth-bending. If it is not a Soviet-style denunciation,
I don't know what is.