Subject:
RES: [NABOKV-L] [THOUGHTS] Associations related to a TV
series: compassion and pity? |
From:
Jansy Mello <jansy.mello@outlook.com> |
Date:
10/1/2015 7:39 PM |
To:
'Vladimir Nabokov Forum' <NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU> |
Former posting: VN not only pairs beauty and pity in his Lecture
on Kafka( “Beauty plus pity-that is the closest
we can get to a definition of art.”), but also in his words about
Cervantes’ Don Quixote: “His blazon is pity, his banner is
beauty. He stands for everything that is gentle, forlorn,
pure, unselfish, and gallant.”# Here, the pity VN has attributed
to Don Quixote is of a different sort than the one he
expressed in L*lita’s afterword. It’s not “selfish” ( a
lamentation caused by the realization that ourselves and our
art are condemned to death and destruction) but it arises as
an expression of what’s best in humanity. / In
many articles on VN’s ethics and underlying philosophy both
kinds of pity are blended into one (the “humanistic” type)
and, as I see it, it’s a mistake. After all, VN allows
himself to feel “virtual” pity towards most of his
characters…
Present posting (JM): It took me so many years to understand a
bit more about VN’s open disgust and anger towards Cervantes
and his open affection and dedication to Cervantes’ creation
“Don Quixote”. I concluded that VN felt indignant not because
Cervantes had savagely mocked and tortured one of his
characters in a “novel” ( this had always seemed very
contradictory to me), he was furious because Cervantes
attacked and parodied the values which his crazy don
represented (“gentle, forlorn…gallant”), namely, what
“chivalry” had stimulated and brought forth during the harsh
medieval days – and that he might have wanted to preserve at
all costs.
Btw: Probably the best word for VN’s pity in his
novels isn’t “virtual,” but “vicarious”. I don’t have a native
speaker’s feeling and this is why I’m still doubtful, for
“vicarious” suggests something that is false or devious or
unreal, and this is not what I mean.
I chose to dwell on this matter because it’s related to some
ideas that came to me after I received and leafed through a
book about “L*litas” in Japan (the friend who brought it to me
had to select among a vast array of “L*lita” (so-called)
renditions by many different painters and designers). The
title of the book is “Mr. by “Mr.”* In the second page there’s
a sentence in Japanese and its translation: “I hate this
world, where there is nothing permanent. There are no
fairies either. I know that, and yet, I cannot help but
look for permanence and express it.”
The juvenile puppet-like drawings in them showed
these “L*litas” as young sly happy temptresses in a way that
is quite different from what Humbert Humbert describes as his
“L*lita”. In VN’s novel HH’s own fantasies were initially
entertained in isolation before he was moved into obtaining a
few vicarious pleasures while Charlotte was alive (the
Carmen-apple-couch scene), and then, into acting them out with
a real girl.
The published collection of now easily available
images of fake innocence was not what surprised me in
particular, but the realization of the kind of freedom to
express “forbidden” fantasies in public, as if in this
instance fantasy life and real life could be kept into two
totally distinct dimensions by artists and viewers. This
separation doesn’t last in VN’s novel but, like it seems to
occur with the manga and anime productions, the transgression
is equally “not real” since it’s attributed to a novelistic
fiction. However, the difference between Western and Eastern
cultures in connection to “fantasy” life events and their
“publication” seems to be rather big. Anyway, there’s still a
lot to learn before I can be certain that their “L*litas” and
even “a L*lita complex” * share nothing with HH’s nymphet:
after all she was his (and only his?) nymphet.
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
*Wiki informs
me: “ Mr. (b. 1969, Cupa, real name Masakatsu Iwamoto,
is a Japanese contemporary artist, based in Saitama
Prefecture, Japan. A former protégé of Takashi Murakami, Mr.'s
work debuted in both solo and group exhibitions in 1996, and
has since been seen in museum and gallery exhibitions in
Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Paris, New York, Minneapolis, Chicago,
Miami, Jerusalem, Los Angeles, and London./He works in a wide
range of media, including painting, sculpture, and video,
though his works are all closely related in aesthetics, style,
and theme. A self-proclaimed otaku with a L*lita complex,
which he says he does not act upon, his pieces depict young
boys and girls in an anime/manga style, drawing upon the
aesthetics and attitudes of otaku culture,
and lolicon themes. While quite cute and innocent on the
surface, many of his works are also quite sexualized, tying
into the anime phenomenon of fanservice, and leaving it an
open question as to how innocent his works are in the
end. Critics have also questioned whether Mr.'s work reflects
a commentary on otaku culture, or glimpses into a private
fantasy world, though Mr. has said his art is about expressing
his personal fantasies, and not about cultural commentary.”