Nabokov: The Mystery of Literary Structures

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Cornell University Press, 1989 - 243 pages

Vladimir Nabokov described the literature course he taught at Cornell as "a kind of detective investigation of the mystery of literary structures." Leona Toker here pursues a similar investigation of the enigmatic structures of Nabokov's own fiction. According to Toker, most previous critics stressed either Nabokov's concern with form or the humanistic side of his works, but rarely if ever the two together. In sensitive and revealing readings of ten novels, Toker demonstrates that the need to reconcile the human element with aesthetic or metaphysical pursuits is a constant theme of Nabokov's and that the tension between technique and content is itself a key to his fiction. Written with verve and precision, Toker's book begins with Pnin and follows the circular pattern that is one of her subject's own favored devices.

 

Contents

The Quest That Overrides the Goal
21
Without Any Passport
36
Secret Asymmetries
67
Good Example of How Metaphysics
88
Guinea Pigs and Galley Slaves
107
Nameless Existence
123
The Inner Problem
177
Broodings on the Rhetoric of Lolita
198
Conclusion
228
Copyright

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About the author (1989)

Leona Toker is Professor of English at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is the author most recently of Towards the Ethics of Form in Fiction: Narratives of Cultural Remission.

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