Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0019746, Fri, 2 Apr 2010 19:02:20 -0300

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Fw: [NABOKOV-L] Bend Sinister through Wilson: sending again!
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----- Original Message -----
From: Jansy
To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum
Sent: Friday, April 02, 2010 1:42 PM
Subject: [NABOKOV-L] Bend Sinister through Wilson


Dear List,

It's been a long time since I planned to copy here several excerpts from Wilson's criticism of "Bend Sinister." Here it is:
January 30,1947, letter 160 (p. 209, "Dear Bunny/dear Volodya",ed. S.Karlinski)

"I was rather disappointed in Bend Sinister...brillian writing and amusing satire - it is not one of your greatest successes."
[...] "You aren't good at this kind of subject, which involves questions of politics and social change, because you are totally uninterested in these matters and have never taken the trouble to understand them...Now don't tell me that the real artist has nothing to do with the issues of politics. An artist may not take politics seriously, but, if he deals with such matters at all, he ought to know what it is all about."
[...] I think, too, that your invented country has not served you particularly well... Beside the actual Nazi Germany and the actual Stalinist Russia, the adventures of your unfortunate professor have the air of an unpleasant burlesque. I never believed in him much from the beginning, was never moved by the wife and the son; but I thought you were going eventually to turn him inside out, take the whole thing apart and show that your ideas of injustice and tragedy were purely subjective, or something of the sort. ( I'm sorry that you gave up the idea of having your hero confront his maker.) As it is, what you are left with on your hands is a satire of events so terrible that they really can't be satirized - because in order to satirize anything you have to make it morse than it is. "

Edmund Wilson's criticism of Bend Sinister seems to be marred by his disappointment and his disagreements with Nabokov concerning communism in Russia and Lenin, and we can feel his "poison." And yet, he set down two important points: the adventures of Adam Krug often "have the air of an unpleasant burlesque." (which I think was intended as such by VN), and, the most important one: "a satire of events so terrible that they can't really be satirized." This aspect describes something which I recently observed in relation to Tarantino's 2009 movie, "Inglorious Basterds" (with the outstanding performance of Christoph Walz and the initial, very slow and long, excellentcene when he, as a Nazi official, is interrogating a farmer: tops!). There are things which, under satire, pull the spectator or the reader into the slime by turning them into the very tyrants and "human beasts," the story originally intends to denounce. This is what happened in Tarantino's movie. It hasn't taken place in BS due to VN's insistence in maintaining the role as an omnipotent author and by his emphasis on the fictionality of events. Nevertheless, there is not one occurrence, as absurd as it seems to be, that hasn't happened in human history: the resource having the staged events dissolve to demonstrate their fictional nature is an unsuccesful maneuver on the author's part. V.N's tactics rob the reader from a confrontation with the senseless destruction he may daily witness, and which results from the alliance of mediocrity, intent on the destruction of those who differ from the standard unthinking automatic pattern ... and a lot more. Injustice and tragedy are real - and Wilson's compliance with a project of making them appear as purely "subjective, or something of the sort," on N's part, is yet another puzzling observation of Wilson, but here again it might have been prompted by his particular frustration with something he'd expected from Bend Sinister ( and which VN didn't have to provide for him...). A funny satire on modern tyrannies (economical and global) and "mindlessness," which has been very successful is Jason Reitman's movie "Up in the Air." ( I haven't yet read Walter Kim's novel) since its "message" doesn't feel like a message but it leaves its imprint while, simultaneously, it lets the spectator free to deal with it using his resources to work it out for himself in his dealings with the outside world. Nabokov's reader, in BS, doesn't get this chance. He is seduced, he may be carried away by the plot but, at long last, he is left in the lurch, to suffer the paralyzing horror of a "denial."

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