EDNote: Two thoughtful replies are already in, and deserve speedy posting.  Further replies will probably wait till tomorrow, due to my schedule.
Victor Fet's correction of my comment is well taken. ~SB

Subject:
RE: [NABOKV-L] VN and Russo-Georgia conflict
From:
"Fet, Victor" <fet@marshall.edu>
Date:
Thu, 14 Aug 2008 12:03:58 -0400
To:
Vladimir Nabokov Forum <NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU>

If one wants to hear VN’s own voice, see his wartime (1944) anti-Stalinist poem in Russian “Kakim by polotnom batal'nym ni yavlyalas' sovetskaya susal'nejshaya’ Rus’....”, in English version:

 

No matter how the Soviet tinsel glitters

upon the canvas of a battle piece,

no matter how the soul dissolves in pity,

I will not bend.

 

(Poems & Problems)

 

Very relevant in VN attitude to tyrants past and present are not only the short classic “Tyrants destroyed” and the entire “Invitation to Beheading” and “Bend Sinister” (both published BEFORE Orwell’s “1984”!) but also “The Walz Invention” and many, many places in “Ada” ’s twisted world. A very recognizable is Extremist coup in Zembla supported by its big eastern neighbor (whatever our opinion of decadent Zemblan monarchy).

 

I do not agree with SB that today “Bolsheviks” are not involved at all.

It is the current Russian government (as opposed to German by the way) that never went through de-Communization, or any kind of even symbolic, let alone legal, repentance process, and de-facto continues to consider itself as a heir to Bolshevik/Communist/Soviet/Ekwilist regime, with all the trimmings and territorial ambitions; the current PM called the demise of the USSR “a great geopolitical tragedy of 20th century”, and is proud of his direct connection with Cheka/GPU/NKVD/KGB unending lineage of “people with cold heads and clean hands”.

 

A careful student of Russian literature and, therefore, history would recall Prague in 1968, Budapest in 1956, Berlin in 1953, the bulk of Eastern Europe so easily dismissed by FDR in Yalta-1945, half of Poland, part of Romania, and all of the Baltics in 1939-1940, Georgia in 1921 [on February 25, 1921, units of the Red Army entered Tbilisi. In Moscow, Lenin received the telegram "The red banner blows over Tbilisi."]…and, after all, all of Russia in 1917-1923.  

 

Victor Fet

 ------

 

Subject:
Re: [NABOKV-L] VN and Russo-Georgia conflict
From:
"jansymello" <jansy@aetern.us>
Date:
Thu, 14 Aug 2008 14:00:23 -0300
To:
"Vladimir Nabokov Forum" <NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU>

James Studdard: "would any of you venture to suggest what VN's opinions would be in the Russo/Georgian incursion."
EDNote: James Studdard's question seems to offer a chance to reflect on Nabokov's attitudes toward nationalism, power, and different forms of aggression in various contexts (SB
). 
JMSandy Klein sent links to Melissa Fall's "Light of my Life" where, after reading Amis's preface to her copy of "Lolita", Falls writes that  according "to Amis, Paris-born Humbert Humbert  [sic] paints Lolita into a corner sketched out by Norman Rockwell and the Hudson River School. Though he acknowledges that Nabokov disagreed with this interpretation, Amis still contends that "the descent of Humbert Humbert on the fruit vert of America is in some sense a pedophilic visitation. Like Lolita, America is above all young."  Then she concludes that: "Humbert Humbert may or may not have created Lolita in the image of America-but Amis creates America in the image of Lolita." (Cf.The Daily Californian,Wednesday, August 13, 2008.) 

When you read VN's novels through the eyes of, say, America's Founding Fathers, or British scholar Amis' eyes, the sexual  impact of invasive pedophilia often obfuscates different indications related to power and aggression. Melissa Fall questions Amis' vision of Lolita as young America, but she doesn't question the ideology of America as a "little girl", a young defenceless prey to the corrupting forces of European interests. 
Would VN have been as naive? 
 
Before exploring what Nabokov might have thought about present-day politics, or has expressed on nationalism and tyrannies either directly, as in SO, or by his stories and novels ( like Bend Sinister, Tyrants Destroyed, Invitation to a Beheading, aso), we may profit from what, independently from any VN direct prompting, has already arisen as a social consequence of his work.
For example, as in the SK's quote I brought up yesterday from a review by Steven G. Kellman (Vickers's Chasing Lolita: How Popular Culture Corrupted Nabokov's Little Girl All Over Again ):"Reading Lolita in Tehran, clandestinely, Azar Nafisi defied a repressive régime[...] the book helped beleaguered Iranian women understand the ways others take control of our voices and ourselves.Two decades earlier[...] I was reading Lolita in Tbilisi, the capital of Soviet Georgia. Nabokov's book was banned, but the students [...]devoured the Russian American's brilliant fiction of coercion." 
 
ED-SB's words invite us to discuss "different forms of aggression in various contexts" and his statement offers us a wider perspective about the effect of VN's "fiction of coercion", ie, one  by which we may focus on VN's experience when we understand that, more than a "Russian American" writer, Nabokov was a man who could distinguish what is unique in a particular geography and culture, and what these details reveal about a bigger, non-geographical,  wide-world net that may overpower individual specimens and, simultaneously, be constituted by them (or, simultaneously, "transcendentally" dominate them all ).  
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