Subject:
Thesis abstract: VN and tyranny and RLSK |
From:
"Andrew Caulton" <a.caulton487@student.dce.ac.nz> |
Date:
Wed, 2 Aug 2006 17:46:40 +1200 |
To:
<NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU> |
Further to my previous
posting regarding my new reading of The Real Life of Sebastian Knight,
attached is the abstract of my PhD thesis, “Vladimir Nabokov, 1938: The
Artistic Response to Tyranny.”
ABSTRACT
Nabokov is well known for
writing numerous indictments of totalitarian
tyranny, most notably Invitation to a
Beheading (1935) and Bend Sinister
(1947). However, my contention in this
thesis is that Nabokov’s most sustained and most significant assault on
totalitarian tyranny occurred in 1938.
The extent of Nabokov’s response
to tyranny in 1938 is not immediately
obvious. Some of Nabokov’s work of the
year engages in an explicit assault on tyranny; however, in other cases
the
assault is oblique and in one instance cryptically concealed. In my thesis I examine each of the works of
1938, and set these against the political circumstances of the year,
the tense
atmosphere on the threshold of World War II.
I find that all of the works of 1938, in one manner or another,
respond
to the political climate of the day; that Nabokov in 1938 made an
unparalleled
artistic response to tyranny in a uniquely ominous year.
The thesis is divided into two
parts.
Part 1 contains studies of each of the lesser works of 1938:
chapter 5
of The Gift, “Tyrants Destroyed,” The
Waltz Invention, “The Visit to the
Museum,” and “Lik.” These studies are
inset into a chronological survey of the personal and political
circumstances
of Nabokov’s life in 1938.
Part 2 constitutes the most
significant aspect of my thesis, an in-depth
study of The Real Life of Sebastian
Knight, Nabokov’s main work of 1938.
The novel has been regarded as detached from the pre-war climate
of the
day; however, in an extensive new reading I find that the bright
appearance of
the novel is only a façade. My reading
reveals a triadic, chess-problem-like structure to the novel, where the
innocuous surface (the thesis) gives way to a cryptically concealed
level of totalitarian
themes (the antithesis), before the novel finally emerges onto a
notional third
level (the synthesis), the novel’s “solution.”
The Real Life of Sebastian Knight,
I contend, represents the heart of Nabokov’s artistic response to
tyranny in
1938. Through the triadic unfolding of
the novel and the reader’s creative engagement with the text, Nabokov
demonstrates that art itself triumphs over tyranny.