Sally McHale: "I am sending this message because this book fulfills the "relevant to Nabokov studies" description. It may require dialing your Naboko-scopes to a low magnification.  Forgive me for recycling if it has already come to your attention. The book-  Fort Da  is published by FC2, ( www.fc2.org)  an imprint ( ?)  of the University of Alabama Press, 2009.  Notations are:  1. Neurologists-Fiction; 2.  Americans-Germany- Fiction;  3. Boys-Fiction; 4. Cypriots-Germany-Fiction;  5. Psychological fiction;  6. Experimental Fiction.
Elizabeth Sheffield, the author,  teaches at The Creative Writing Program at The University of Colorado in Boulder.  The book ( Finally!) - Fort Da  has bold, perhaps crude, Nabokov (ian)  style and content.  I found it wildly imaginative  ( blind waiters,   Schlafzentrum)  and absurdly funny.  I am no scholar, but do have aspirations of understanding and enjoying Nabokov.  Enjoying comes more naturally to me.  Fort Da was enjoyable. I wonder what you all will think of and will find in this book.  I think it worthy, which is what emboldened me to actually "participate" in this listserv."
 
JM:  Freud again? "Fort Da" is a famous pair of words which were first mentioned by S.Freud, in "Beyond the Pleasure Principle."
His baby grandson was playing in his crib with a spool of thread that his mother Sophie had attached to a ribbon. He would throw the spool out from the crib and scream OOOOOOOO, next he would pull it back and, happily yell: AAAAAAA.
Freud understood the sounds he made to mean "Fort (gone)" and "Da (here it/she is)".
He related it to an attempt to overcome traumatic situations ( mother's absence) by acquiring control over her disapparances, through symbolization ( the spool and the words). The story is more elaborate, but worth reading it in Freud. His daughter died a few years later and he mentions this fact in the saddest little footnote I ever read (also in BPP).  
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