Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0000115, Thu, 16 Sep 1993 10:43:02 -0700

Subject
NABOKOV STUDIES: Contents
Date
Body
NABOKOVIANS!
The new journal NABOKOV STUDIES is scheduled to appear around
Thanksgiving. An annotated Table of Contents is given below. Subscription
information may be found at the end of the message. Please note this is a
print journal, and its contents will not be available on NABOKV-L, the
journal's electronic affiliate. Please ask your university or college
library to subscribe.
D. Barton Johnson, Editor


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Vol. I 1993

NABOKOV STUDIES

Table of Contents

Joel Brattin----""The Intersection of McEwen and Wheaton: A Nabokovian
Locus Identified." The paper pinpoints the location of an epic row
between Humbert and Lolita in Clare, Michigan. Photograph by author.

Julian Connolly---"Nabokov and Narrative Point of View: The Case of
`The Letter that never Reached Russia'."

Jane Grayson---"Washington's GIFT: Materials pertaining to Nabokov's
GIFT in the Library of Congress." The LC Nabokov Archive contains
both materials that were composed for THE GIFT but not used, and
materials for a second volume that was never written. The article
examines these drafts in relation to Nabokov's oeuvre.

D. Barton Johnson---"The Nabokov-Sartre Controversy" An examination of
the relationship between Nabokov's 1926 short story "Terror" and
Sartre's 1938 NAUSEA and the subsequent antagonism between the two
men.

Stephanie Merkel---"Vladimir Nabokov's KING, QUEEN, KNAVE and the Com-
media Dell'Arte." An analysis of the early novel in terms of character
types and motifs from the Commedia."

Charles Nicol---"Necessary Introduction or Fatal Fatuity: The Extended
Introduction to BEND SINISTER." Establishes a paradigm for Nabokov's
numerous introductions and devotes particular attention to subtexts in
BEND SINISTER's "Foreword".

Maxim Shrayer---"`Cloud, Castle, Lake' and the Problem of Entering
Nabokov's Otherworld. A close analysis of this story with
implications for much of the short fiction.

Jonathan B. Sisson---"Nabokov's Cosmic Synchronization and `Something
Else'." A study of Nabokov's key concept of "cosmic synchronization"
and the literary techniques he employs to convey his sense of the
otherworld.

Susan Elizabeth Sweeney---"Sinistral Details: Nabokov, Wilson, and
HAMLET in BEND SINISTER." The article suggests that Nabokov
incorporated elements of his relationship with Edmund Wilson into his
1947 novel.

Leona Toker---"Liberal Ironists and the `Gaudily Painted Savage': On
Richard Rorty's Reading of Vladimir Nabokov." Argues that Rorty's
well-known essay misreads Nabokov in certain respects.

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NABOKOV STUDIES will also carry reviews of the following recent works:

1) John Burt Foster, NABOKOV'S ART OF MEMORY AND EUROPEAN MODERNISM.
Rev. by Clarence Brown.
2) Nikolai Anastas'ev, FENOMEN NABOKOVA. Rev. by D. Barton Johnson
3) Alfred Appel, Jr. THE ART OF CELEBRATION: TWENTIETH CENTURY PAINT-
ING, LITERATURE, SCULPTURE, PHOTOGRAPHY, AND JAZZ.
Rev. by Charles Nicol.
4) Tony Sharpe---VLADIMIR NABOKOV. Rev. by Samuel Schuman.
5) Charles Nicol & Gennady Barabtarlo, eds.---A SMALL ALPINE FORM:
STUDIES IN NABOKOV'S SHORT FICTION. Rev. by Maxim Shrayer.
6) Julian Connolly----NABOKOV'S EARLY FICTION: PATTERNS OF SELF AND
OTHER. Rev. by Leona Toker.
7) Magdalena Medaric---OD MASHENKE DO LOLITE. Rev. by Zoran Kuzmanovich.
8) Donald Harington---EKATERINA. Rev. by Clarence Brown.
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NABOKOV STUDIES #1 will also contain "NABOKOV IN MINNESOTA. November
1941," a poem by J.B. Sisson, and several photographs by Gennady
Barabtarlo.
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The Nabokov Electronic Forum (NABOKV-L at listserv@ucsbvm.bitnet) will
serve as a forum for the discussion of material that appears in the
journal--as well as for any other matters related to Nabokov.
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SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION: Individual ($20.75) and institutional
($30.75) subscriptions may be obtained from Charles Schlacks, Pub-
lisher, Dept. of Langs. & Lits., 153 Orson Spencer Hall, Univ. of
Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112.

SUBMISSIONS: Three copies with return postage for one copy. Send to D.
Barton Johnson, Editor, NABOKOV STUDIES, Dept. of Germanic & Slavic
Langs., Phelps Hall, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA
93106. Phone and Fax messages: (805) 687-1825; phone calls: (805) 682-
4618; E-mail: chtodel@humanitas.ucsb.edu