If appointed/elected, my three goals,
to be completed by the
end of my four years of service,
are:
(1)
a functional and more
communal/international VN society website (benefitting from
Jeff
Edmunds’s
advice and designed along the lines Priscilla, Julian,
Steve, and I have already discussed at the ASEES meeting)
The key
to this proposal is that different folks would be in charge of
creating/editing/maintaining (and getting credit for) different
features of the website; they would be able to work both
together and independently. Briefly, such a website
would have
a promotional/informational portion free to the public: news about conferences, events, and
publications; interviews with Nabokovians that would feature
the pioneers and the incoming scholars; links to interesting
Nabokoviana; blurbs about, and excerpts from ongoing work;
discussion forums, links to the Facebook page, Twitter
feed,
etc. That portion would inform and
direct the novices as well as promote VNS, the scholarly work of
its members, and a sense of a global Nabokov community. It
would be possible to make the site interactive, have particular
features rated by visitors for helpfulness and have those become
more visible or more frequently visible on the website as a way
of creating what my students call “buzz” that could then be
Tweeted.
But Subscribers/members of VNS
would have password-ed access to the current issue of
The Nabokovian or to those features of The Nabokovian
the Board of VNS chooses to retain. Additionally, subscribers
would have also access to the bibliography, notes, annotations,
and commentary in a number of languages, a concordance to VN's
works, ability to search through previous issues of The
Nabokovian, digital reprints of out-of-print criticism on
Nabokov’s works, and any other features we decide on. The
website would have an international dimension, highlighting or
linking to Nabokov societies or groups in France, Germany,
Japan, Russia, etc. There would be a staggered fee structure
based on what features people would want to access and on the
stage of their scholarly career.
(2)
higher visibility for VNS events at
national meetings and conventions
The higher visibility would necessarily
mean more recruiting among incoming and mid-career Nabokov
scholars, and the VNS website would be one device for further
service to the Society if such recruiting is successful.
(3)
enough of a budgetary surplus to pay
for at least the yearly business dinner for those members
of the Board who attend the MLA/AATSEEL national meetings,
the customary venue for the Board’s meetings.
The promises I make commit neither the
current President nor the President-Elect who would follow me to
any financial obligations. Should we experience a windfall, we
can start thinking, again communally, about using the surplus
for more noble purpose than food and drink: prizes, stipends,
special publications honoring pioneers of Nabokov studies, etc.
But I like food and drink as a
reasonable starting point. Every other Society I am familiar
with has at least that civilized practice.
Although I am not mentioning the rewriting
of the By-Laws as a goal, I fully recognize that they need to be
amended, and I am grateful to Steve for starting the process and
to Leland for publically volunteering to see it to the end.
Stephen H. Blackwell
Professor and Chair, Russian Program (Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures)
President, Vladimir Nabokov Society
Co-Editor, Nabokv-L
Mail:
MFLL-701 McClung Tower
University of Tennessee
Knoxville, TN 37996
Email: sblackwe@utk.edu
865 974 4536 (email preferred)
Fax: 865 974 7096
Office: McClung 606