Although Robert
MacLean’s tone, website, and truly bad “poetry” may be irritating to
many of us, it’s worth noting that, besides MacLean, at least three
prestigious admirers of Nabokov have recently raised the same question
that seems to have perturbed some members of the List:
MARTIN AMIS: “The
problem with Nabokov” (this is the essay that MacLean refers to and
rudely dismisses)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/nov/14/vladimir-nabokov-books-martin-amis
JOHN BANVILLE:
“The Still Mysterious Enchanter” (a review of Michael
Maar’s Speak, Nabokov)
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2010/jul/15/still-mysterious-enchanter/?page=2
MICHAEL
MAAR: Speak, Nabokov, chapter 9
At the end of the
second paragraph quoted above, MacLean says that “in one of [VN’s]
essays he opines that if the criminal could only write about the crime
he wouldn’t have to commit it.” Can someone tell me where, if anywhere,
VN says this or something similar? It strikes me as an important
statement.
In any case, it
is a matter of indifference to me whether VN (or anyone else, for that
matter) fantasizes about sex with underage girls, so long as he stops
short of putting his fantasies into action and, for his own sake, is not
reduced to the status of obnoxious outcast eternally hunched over his
computer with one hand on the mouse and the other you know
where--forever panting, forever miserable. VN himself seems to have been
a model of health and good citizenship in both of these regards. I agree
with MacLean that sometimes, in interviews, he comes across as a stuffed
shirt. For this reason, I find it refreshing that he had a taste for
pornography and that he not only published his work
in Playboy but also seems to have enjoyed reading the
magazine--and no doubt looking at the pictures as well.
Amis, Banville,
and Maar can, of course, speak for themselves, but those readers who
haven’t yet seen VN’s 1928 poem “Lilith”--quoted in part by Banville and
in its entirety by Maar--may be in for a shock. As for Ada,
I dislike it not for its high quotient of smut (including underage sex
and incest) but for its coy pretentiousness. And although The
Original of Laura is barely a trifle, it is most certainly not
an innocent trifle. A passion for sex, much of it with very young girls,
runs throughout VN’s work, from early in his career to the very
end--sometimes to good artistic effect and, as Amis and Banville point
out, sometimes not.
In his response
to MacLean, Brian Boyd offers as an “antidote” a brief essay by Jeffrey
Moussaieff Masson. In my view, we should all be grateful to Masson for
bringing to light the sadly hilarious story of poor Emma Eckstein, whose
nose had the misfortune of falling into the hands of two crackpots
called Freud and Fliess, and whose “treatment” had long been covered up
by the psychoanalytic establishment represented by Kurt Eissler and Anna
Freud. (This is the case referred to by Ms. Efremov.) Even so, I don’t
think Masson is the right person to be lecturing us about Nabokov. In
her book In the Freud Archives, Janet Malcolm reveals, or
rather lets Masson reveal in his own words, that he is (or at least was)
a less than trustworthy person much given to simplistic black-and-white
thinking. As Anthony Stadlen says, Masson’s own book on
Freud, The Assault on Truth: Freud’s Suppression of the
Seduction Theory is both wrongheaded and superficial. He might
have added that the book’s main effect was to help fuel the fire of the
false-memory and satanic-panic uproars that wrecked the lives of many
innocent Americans for the better part of twenty years. More to the
point, perhaps, is the fact that incest is a pervasive theme in world
literature and also (as Jansy points out) in the general folk-wisdom of
parents everywhere and everywhen. VN would hardly have needed to go to
Freud for inspiration. Furthermore, if VN had been writing as a straight
moralist--as John Ray, Jr., for example, or Jeffrey Masson--he would
surely not have ended Lolita as he did, with Dolores as
the “normal” one of the two, quietly and gracefully giving the boot to
the monster who had raped and tormented her for so long. We should also
note that during the seduction-theory period, the traumas that Freud
considered important in the formation of neuroses occurred much earlier
in life than the abuse Humbert inflicted on Dolores, who showed no signs
of neurosis at the time Humbert appeared in her life. She was too much
the average twelve-year-old to have needed the attention of a
psychiatrist or analyst. In short, I suspect
that Lolita is far too complex a novel for Masson to
enlighten us about. Anyhow, if VN’s purpose in writing was to put a stop
to a widespread social evil, then the book would have to be deemed a
colossal failure. To see what I mean, one has only to Google the word
“Lolita” or to be otherwise aware of the significance of the word all
over the planet.
In a charming
essay from Salon, published in 1998, Justine Brown describes
her first reading of Lolita when she was herself twelve
years old. The book was given to her by an older woman friend, as a
warning about the dangers of child molestation. Other friends were more
direct: “Now everyone will want to screw you,” one of them told her.
These warnings were in vain. During this first reading, Brown’s
sympathies were all with Humbert. After rereading the book in later
years, with a more sophisticated understanding of it, she reflects
that Lolita “didn’t
shield me from the perverts, but neither did it send me leaping into
their cars. It had little effect on my relationship with men. Instead,
it transformed my relationship with literature. I fell in love with
books.” That, in my opinion, is a thought worth endorsing. For anyone
interested in reading Brown’s essay, here’s the link:
http://www1.salon.com/mwt/feature/1998/07/31feature.html
I should add that I agree
entirely with Sam Gwynn about the supposed sighting of VN at the Sun
Valley Lodge.
Finally, I wish
to thank Ms. Efremov for bringing MacLean’s essay to our attention.
Despite her own misgivings, and although I think she’s wrong about VN
being ahead of his time vis-à-vis Freud, I believe (obviously) that
MacLean opens up several interesting questions about major themes in
VN’s work--questions that are considered at greater length by Amis,
Banville, and Maar.
Jim Twiggs
P.S. I apologize
for not mentioning by name all who have commented on the subject of
MacLean. I especially apologize if I’ve failed to give proper credit on
one point or another. If I’ve committed errors of fact, I trust I’ll be
duly corrected.Date: Friday, February 10, 2012, 8:30
AM