From Charles to
Carolyn
……whiff of Ayn Rand,
if you'll allow me.
I associate
Who after all was
the "true artist" - - Lolita? or Humbert?
I can’t follow this point. Are you
saying that Lolita was the American, Humbert the European, and that Lolita was
the “truer artist”? I don’t think of either as an “artist” in any sense at all.
VN was the “artist”. Perhaps you are saying that Lolita was the innocent, and
Humbert was the swine, but I don’t see that this has anything to do with either
character as “artist”.
not to forget that
VN was as much observer, scholar, scientist and teacher as anything
else.
I suggest that VN will be remembered
1st as a writer; 2nd as a research lepidopterist. He does not seem to me to expound any
“theories”, but I may be wrong when it comes to lepidoptery. Does he have any
over-arching “theory” about literature?
Actually, “theory” is rather a vague word. There is something called
“chess theory”, but it is no “theory” at all, and consists entirely of an
accumulation of knowledge derived from chess “practice”. Every new chess
champion follows his own deeper understanding of the game, and demolishes this
accumulation by inventing a new style of play which causes “theory” to be
re-written.
Yes, VN was a teacher, off and on,
but I suggest that his time spent teaching was faute de mieux, and that immediately the
necessity for it ceased he abandoned it as drudgery. I don’t mean to imply that
there aren’t any dedicated, selfless teachers who can have a highly beneficial
effect on their students. Usually their teaching consists not of creating a
coterie of worshippers at their feet, but of encouraging the students to think
for themselves.
let me stand up for
Formalism, which I doubt VN rejected
Formalism,
which I had to look up, apparently
“describes an
emphasis on form over content or meaning in the arts, literature, or
philosophy.” I wouldn’t agree that
VN can be categorized under such a heading. It seems to me that there is a
search for “meaning” in all his works: or, at least, that a reader is encouraged
to seek a meaning in them. But perhaps you have something
there.
Sergey Karpukhin
wrote:
One
British intellectual suggested that the calculatedly “difficult” idiom of
20thC English literary modernism was an anti-egalitarian conspiracy
to keep the common reader out. Lovely Joyce and lovely Beckett, both
arch-Europeans, are elitist; VN is democratic and even populist in comparison to
them.
Was this
the British critic, now working in the
To
be more accurate, VN draws on both European elitism and American populism at
will, and combines them to produce the necessary artistic result. His main,
artistic criteria are, I’d suggest, lifted clear of nationality or geographical
affiliation. It’s we who need him to be Russian, European, or American. The
thing is he was all of those, and more. So we shouldn’t be surprised to hear one
day that he was the archetypal Transatlantic writer.
I’d agree
that artistic criteria are above nationality. However, the artist is
nevertheless necessarily the product of his own personal inheritance and
environment, and in VN’s case these are essentially
non-American.
And
I should say that theory itself is “doing,” at any rate it can be sublimely
creative.
Well, this
depends on what is meant by “theory”. When it comes to literary theory (ie
excluding something like Einstein’s theory, which is indubitably creative) I
think it is purely parasitic, and nothing but a fairly barren spin-off from the
creativity of genuine practitioners. I have an old friend who was quite recently
bewailing his fate of coming under the cosh of F.R.Leavis when an undergraduate
at
Charles