Dear participants in a fascinating and mind-bending discussion on the authorship question in PF:

I have a minor correction, and a small dollup of information about notes and manuscripts.

The MC: VN's dictionary was Webster's 2nd, not the 3rd--which was a significant abridgement of the 2nd.

The dollup: I have been looking at archival materials as part of my ongoing work on the relation between VN's scientific and artistic activities.  The notecards at the Berg Collection of the NYPL,which are open to scholars, tell us some potentially interesting things about what VN might have been thinking about during PF's composition.  We can't make absolute conclusions from these, as they are probably incomplete; and they themselves have ambivalent significance. But for what they are worth:

During the fifties, VN looked at psychiatric journals.  Some of the results of these exercises can be found explicitly in Pnin--and possibly also in Lolita--in references to specific psychiatric papers.  There are several note cards with details from these articles; they relate to studies of sexual behavior in children and adults, as tranformed in Pnin (e.g. pp 50-52).  There are also notes that relate to psychical research: Psychical Research Today (D.J. West, 1954) and examples of secondary personalities; also, a long-ish reference to The Case of Patience Worth ((W.F. Prince, 1927)--a renowned case of channeling by a mid-western housewife of a 17th century author (during the years 1912-1937).  The notes also include reference to the possible faking of such paranormal phenomena--but no specific comments or evaluations by VN about his response to these.  (I can't quote directly, of course, because these are unpublished materials and I haven't requested permission to quote them.)  There is nothing in the notes I have seen, I should add, that suggests anything about the "authorship" or "identity" questions.  This information does not help us make a decision; maybe VN destroyed his "keys".  We are left (we on the sidelines, I mean) to evaluate for ourselves the force of the arguments on either side. The notes are in the item "Notes on various subjects", a binder of several hundred note cards.

It is perhaps worth mentioning that in the one (?) other VN novel where an alternate personality is a definite trait of the narrator, The Eye, the situation is related both to a death wish and to intimations of homosexuality.  But the narrator never converses with Smurov, his erstwhile self.

With best wishes to all,

Stephen Blackwell,
your lurking co-editor

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