GU:
Dear Jansy Mello, Many
thanks for your comments. In
Russian there is “obez’iana” (singular) or “obez’iany” (plural), just like in
Portuguese. (Incidentally, “obez’iana” is derived from a word, which is met in
the Levant and Persia —
“abuzine”.)
SS:
I think Russian in this sense is closer to Portuguese: most common is
the
word "obesyany" which covers both apes and monkeys.
VF:
Jansy (and Grigory): I think we are mixing here a lot of apples and
oranges -- or Oranges and Peaches (Darwin's famous book title, as you know :).
I do
not think that calling VN a "creationist" in art helps too much -- in art VN was
a "creator." ... And while it is true that VN was (and many are still)
dissatisfied with neo-Darwinist models of his (pre-molecular) times, I daresay
he never disputed evolution as a process: instead, he celebrated its wonders
every time he had chance both as an artist and as an intellectual. Clearly
it has nothing to do with modern "creationism", largely an anti-intellectual
political and cultural phenomenon...Apes and monkeys: in Russian indeed they are
a single word, unlike in English ("obezyany") --- but I would not read
evolutionism into English language only because it has a separate word for
apes
Dear Victor, my intention was
mainly inspired in a rethorical play, thus if I envisioned "VN as a
creationist" I was not then adhering to strict scientific theories, about which
I'm insufficiently informed, but contrasting VN's art in science and
science in art attempting ( ineptly, as I now see it) to describe two aspects of
"creation", one that departs ab nihilo ( if such a verbal image
can be pardoned, once we admit that language is never absent ) to
achieve a godlike "Fiat", and another, that interprets the existing world to
proceed along an exciting road of creation. Jansy
"A Russian aristocrat, writer and
scientist, Nabokov represents the features of a cultural world of 'aristocratic'
natural history which blended aesthetics and science," said Alexandrov, a Center
Research Fellow and historian of science from the European University of St.
Petersburg.
...An important aspect of the shift was the
replacement of traditional taxonomy by modern science, a transformation that
Nabokov resisted...Butterflies and beetles were for him...aesthetic objects akin
to paintings and engravings. Nature was equated with art, and the conservation
of nature with the preservation of art... Already a published novelist in
Russian, Nabokov's first publication in English was the article, "A Few Notes on
Crimean Lepidoptera." His vision of nature and belief in the immanent
laws of form put Nabokov at the center of a debate in taxonomy and evolutionary
biology fueled by Darwinian ideas... A sharp critic of Mayr, Nabokov wrote,
"Taxonomists would be far better in describing with precision all the
morphological details of certain forms than in studying so-called populations -
what a dreadfully misused and hideous word, anyway." ...In his autobiographical
Speak, Memory, Nabokov marvels at the elaborate mimicry in larvae and
butterflies aimed at fooling predators, and dismisses Darwin's evolutionary
explanation: "'Natural selection,' in the Darwinian sense, could not explain the
miraculous coincidence of imitative aspect and imitative behavior, nor could one
appeal to the theory of 'the struggle for life' when a protective devise was
carried to a point of mimetic subtlety, exuberance, and luxury far in excess of
a predator's power of appreciation. Both were a form of magic, both were a game
of intricate enchantment and deception."...The new taxonomic approach attempted to eliminate aesthetics from
science, said Alexandrov, by its recognition of the boundaries between the
scientific and non-scientific, between science and art... "Many who had been
raised with aristocratic lifestyles 'surrendered' in the 1930's, that is, they
changed their minds, not just because of arguments against the past but because
their daily lives changed - thought-style changes with lifestyle. But Nabokov
lived in his past and his prose. There was no need for him to change his life
and mode of thought." ...Had he remained in Russia, it's possible, perhaps
likely, that Nabokov would have become an entomologist who wrote rather than a
writer who did entomology... His loyalty to aesthetic essentialism into the
middle of the 20thcentury, said Alexandrov, "allows us to view both the cultural
richness of a form of life to which he belonged and the ending of its existence
brought about by general changes in the modernization and professionalization of
science."
Also, www.coloradocollege.edu/Bulletin/August2005/block4.asp - 14k
- where we read about Corinne Scheiner's
project about "... the intersections of
Nabokov’s work as a novelist and his work as a lepidopterist...demonstrate, as
Stephen Jay Gould suggests, that the “major linkage of science and literature
lies in some distinctive, underlying approach that Nabokov applied equally to
both domains — a procedure that conferred the same special features upon all his
efforts.” ... Bearing in mind Nabokov’s claim that “in a work of art there
is a kind of merging between … the precision of poetry and the excitement of
science,” we begin by reading from his autobiography, “Speak, Memory,” to
discover how his interests in literature and butterflies merge in his
life".
All private editorial communications, without
exception, are
read by both co-editors.