Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0010180, Sun, 1 Aug 2004 18:58:08 -0700

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Re: VN's synaesthesia for Blue (fwd)
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---------- Forwarded Message ----------
Date: Sunday, August 01, 2004 9:53 PM +0100
From: Nick Grundy <nick@bsad.org>
To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum <NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU>
Subject: Re: VN's synaesthesia for Blue

> What is the color blue associated with in VN's works? Shade of blue
> are predominant in RLSK. All help appreciated.
>
> -Sandy Drescher

I'm always a bit nervous of getting carried away with colour given John
Shade's thoughts on the matter, but blue crops up a good deal in Pnin,
where it tends to denote his happiness or love. At Cook’s Castle a sort of
second home for Pnin (and almost a part of Russia) a “score of small
butterflies” have a “celestial hue” and resemble “blue snow-flakes”, the
wallpaper in his room as a boy in Russia has a “pale-blue background”, a
globe in his house shows “Russia[?]painted a pale blue”, Liza’s eyes are
“transparent blue” or "brilliant blue", becoming “aquamarine” (p.37) - a
mix of blue and green - in Pnin’s mind after she has left him for the
second time.

I can't say if this applies elsewhere - certainly didn't notice it
prominently in Speak, Memory, Pale Fire, or Lolita...

Nick.
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EDNOTE. And Nabokov's field of lep specialization was the "Blues", the
Lycindae

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D. Barton Johnson
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