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Vladimir
Nabokov
Week of January 8, 2001
Nabokov
was born in April 1899 in St. Petersburg, Russia. His parents were
wealthy and had a commitment to public service. Nabokov, who categorized
himself as "a perfectly normal trilingual child in a family with
a large library," attended the Tenishev School in St. Petersburg,
the most advanced and expensive school in Russia. In addition to
his avid participation in sports, Nabokov indulged in what would
become a life-long passion for him butterfly collecting.
In November 1917, after the abdication of Tsar Nicholas, the family
fled to a friend's estate in the Crimea. Nabokov's father, Vladimir
Dmitrievich Nabokov, a leader of the Kadet party, accepted a position
in the provisional government. When the Bolsheviks took over, the
family fled to England. Nabokov attended Trinity College, Cambridge,
studying ichthyology and French and Russian literature.
The family settled in Berlin which had a large Russian émigré
community. Nabokov began writing poetry and short fiction, using
the pseudonym of V.I. Sirin. He also earned money by giving tennis
and English lessons, acting, and translating. He published his first
scholarly article on butterflies in The Entomologist, and
composed the first Russian crossword puzzles. On April 15, 1925,
he married Véra Slonim. Their son, Dmitri, was born in 1934.
Soon, world events forced him into exile again. In 1937 Nabokov
and his family fled Hitler's Germany for Paris. The 1940 German
invasion of France forced them to flee once more this time
to New York. In the U.S., Nabokov taught, collected and studied
butterflies, and wrote. He became a U.S. citizen in 1945.
Nabokov
came to Wellesley College in 1941 for a year as a lecturer in comparative
literature. He returned to teach Russian, first in a non-credit
course (spring of 1943), then as a regular part of the curriculum.
In addition to the introductory course, as the sole member of the
newly formed Russian
Department, he taught courses on Russian poetry and prose in
translation. While at Wellesley College, Nabokov also held an appointment
at the Museum of Comparative
Zoology at Harvard. In 1948 Nabokov went to Cornell as chair
of the department of comparative literature.
At Wellesley, Nabokov's courses were very popular. One of his students,
Hannah Green '48, talked about being in his class in a February
1977 New Yorker article. "He didn't talk about conflict
or symbols or character development," she said. "He didn't talk
about the things that were usually talked about in literature courses.
He didn't try to make us state the underlying meaning of something.
He didn't make us talk about themes. He never took the joy
out of reading... In the gayest, most natural way in the world,
he opened the door and led us into the world of Russian literature.
He taught us to take literature seriously and what is ordinarily
said about it lightly. He gave me back my passion for reading."
An insomniac, Nabokov did most of his writing at night. Zembla,
a web site devoted to Nabokov contains
a list of his works and critical comment on them. His publications
included poetry, translations, essays, short stories, novels, plays,
and scholarly treatises on butterflies. His autobiography, Conclusive
Evidence: A Memoir (1951) was first published in England as
Speak, Memory: A Memoir.
Nabokov's best known work, Lolita, a novel about a man's
affair with his twelve-year old stepdaughter, initally was refused
by four American publishers as too scandalous. It was eventually
published in Paris in 1955 by Olympia Press; the American edition
appeared in 1958. The success of the book and the subsequent movie
version gave Nabokov the financial security to give up teaching.
He moved to Switzerland in 1959.
Nabokov
died on July 2, 1977, in Montreux, Switzerland, leaving behind a
unique literary legacy. The New York Times obituary explained
that "his writing often perplexed his readers. 'For some weeks now
I have been floundering and traveling in the mind of that American
genius, Vladimir Vladimirovitch Nabokov,' wrote the critic Alfred
Kazin on reading the writer's novel Ada in 1969. His remark
echoed the attitude of many readers... These readers recognized
Mr. Nabokov's technical brilliance and mastery of form, but were
frequently baffled by his irrepressible sense of flippancy and his
penchant for parody. Was he, it was asked, a gifted artificer entranced
by fun and games, or was he a creative and profound artist?"
Perhaps a 1977 article in Time said it best: "[Nabokov's]
challenging, intricate fiction, which miraculously demonstrates
that art is not a mirror held up to nature, but rather a prism that
refracts blinding reality into rainbows of wisdom and feeling."
Written by Wilma Slaight
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