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That Other World

Nabokov and the Puzzle of Exile

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The foundational text for the acclaimed international best seller Reading Lolita in Tehran
“Empathetic, incisive. . . . A sweeping overview of Nabokov's major works. . . . Graceful [and] discerning.”—Kirkus Reviews
The ruler of a totalitarian state seeks validation from a former schoolmate, now the nation’s foremost thinker, in order to access a cultural cache alien to his regime. A literary critic provides commentary on an unfinished poem that both foretells the poet’s death and announces the critic’s secret identity as the king of a lost country. The greatest of Vladimir Nabokov’s enchanters—Humbert—is lost within the antithesis of a fairy story, in which Lolita does not hold the key to his past but rather imprisons him within the knowledge of his distance from that past.
In this precursor to her international best seller Reading Lolita in Tehran, Azar Nafisi deftly explores the worlds apparently lost to Nabokov’s characters, their portals of access to those worlds, and how other worlds hold a mirror to Nabokov’s experiences of physical, linguistic, and recollective exile. Written before Nafisi left the Islamic Republic of Iran, and now published in English for the first time and with a new introduction by the author, this book evokes the reader’s quintessential journey of discovery and reveals what caused Nabokov to distinctively shape and reshape that journey for the author.
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    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2019
      Essays on how the work of Vladimir Nabokov evoked the feelings of alienation and loss that many experienced in post-revolutionary Iran. When a "violent ideological totalitarian revolution" proclaimed itself as the Islamic Republic of Iran, Nafisi (The Republic of Imagination: America in Three Books, 2014, etc.) felt "in a perpetual state of exile" from her beloved homeland. As a teacher and critic, she found in Nabokov a clear articulation of those feelings. "For him," she writes, "exile was not just a physical migration," but "a feeling of unreality, orphanhood, isolation." Her close readings, along with critical and biographical studies, inform seven empathetic, incisive essays that together provide a sweeping overview of Nabokov's major works. Translated by Khonji and revised for this publication in English, the essays predate, and contextualize, Nafisi's acclaimed memoir, Reading Lolita in Tehran (2003). Nabokov, more than other authors she was reading and teaching, spoke to the "deep traumatic and anguished existence" that pervaded life under a repressive dictatorship. He was acutely sensitive "to bad literature, autocratic regimes, and racial, ethnic, or religious prejudice." In his two overtly "political novels," Invitation to a Beheading and Bend Sinister, he represents totalitarianism as a mindset that believes it alone holds "a monopoly on reality" to which all must defer, and in which all artistic creativity and expressions of individuality are considered subversive and dangerous. In confronting this tension between politics and art, Nabokov, rather than depict totalitarianism's destructive and "horrific reality," explored how "creative minds" perceive and "resist its onslaught." Among other works Nafisi examines are the parody Pnin, in which the main character "can be considered a literary descendent of Quixote"; Pale Fire; The Real Life of Sebastian Knight; and Ada (the first of Nabokov's novels that she read), which influenced her profoundly. The novel, she writes, "did not merely portray quotidian realities--it articulated the reader's subjective realities." In a sensitive, cleareyed reading of Lolita, Nafisi sees the novel as more than a portrayal of obsession or parody of love but an inquiry into questions of individuality, personal liberty, and loss. Graceful, discerning literary essays.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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