Jerry Friedman writes:
 
Like others, I've found a great deal of interest in Matt Roth's and Tiffany DeRewal's close reading of /Pale Fire/.  I have a lot to say about it, so I'll submit one part at a time (and with apologies for two long posts in one day).
 
I agree with Jim Twiggs that the multiple-personality theory solves the main objection to the Shadean theory: no one would act the way Shade would need to.  Of course a crazy person might act that way.  It also sidesteps my argument that the inconsistencies in Kinbote's account make him so unreliable that no "real story" is believable.  Their Kinbote is perfectly unreliable, but their Shade is not, and thus they provide a reason for "saving" the reliability of the poem.
 
Unfortunately, I don't find their evidence convincing, and though I hate to say it, the rest of this comment and the one that follows will consist mostly of objections.
 
Their paper comments on some of the "covert concords" between Shade and Kinbote that Brian Boyd listed.  For instance, Shade, Kinbote, and Gradus have the same birthday.  When I suggested that Kinbote lies to embarrass Sybil when he tells her this is his birthday (n. 181--I could have added that he corroborates the date in n. 275), Matt answered that he saw no reason to doubt Kinbote here.  But Kinbote is childish and self-centered; would he really recount many details of that day, and of his lonely observation of Shade's party, without mentioning that it was his birthday too?  His birthday that he believes had once been celebrated with fireworks (an "illumination")?  I think that's a strong reason for doubt.
 
Matt and Tiffany point out that Hazel's ghostly influence doesn't explain the coincidence of Shade's clockwork toy and Kinbote's gardener, but Shadean theories don't explain it any better than the "straightforward" Kinbote-is-Botkin theory.  If the toy and the person are both "real", then the coincidence is beyond any characters' control; if not, Kinbote could have made up the toy or the gardener or both, or Shade could have made up at least the gardener's wheelbarrow as a private reminiscence of his toy.
 
The paper mentions Charles Nicol's idea that there are three waxwings at the beginning of the poem.  I think it works fine with only two; the shadow lives on "as our shadows still walk without us" (Foreword).  It's a fantasy or visionary image.
 
They quote Brian Boyd's argument that Zembla must have existed before Kinbote read the poem; otherwise Kinbote wouldn't have been disappointed.  This is reasonable with Brian's largely reliable Kinbote.  But I don't think one can make such an argument about Matt and Tiffany's wildly unreliable Kinbote (even though I agree that he's unreliable).  If he could invent the other things they credit to him, he could invent his disappointment.
 
As I've said, I like the connections with werewolves (not just because I pointed out a small one), and I hope Matt will develop this at greater length, though my interpretation is different from his.
 
I'm highly impressed by their scholarship in finding out about Nabokov's interest in nineteenth-century "psychical" research and particularly in the case of Ansel Bourne.   I can see some resemblances that they point out, and they convinced me that Bourne may have been one of the sources for Shade.  This greatly strengthens their case, as mere references to double identities, such as "my versipel", could refer to Botkin/Kinbote.  But I also see important differences between Shade and Bourne.  For instance, they compare Bourne's fit of perceiving nothingness to Shade's fits in childhood.  But Shade doesn't see nothing; he sees blackness—and "[t]hat blackness was sublime".  All colors make him happy, after all.  Bourne perceived nothing—not even blackness is mentioned--and was miserable in a silent universe.  Shade describes his perceptions of his body and of distant times and places; he's still connected to reality.  Kinbote's guess that Shade's fits
 were epilepsy and the researcher Richard Hodgson's identical conclusion about Bourne are unsurprising, as epilepsy seems a natural diagnosis for sudden temporary unconsciousness without any obvious cause.
 
Matt and Tiffany quote Myers's theory that somnambulism can develop into a secondary personality.  But in Shade's sleepwalking as well as in his childhood fits and near-death vision, there's no trace of anything Kinbotean.  He doesn't remember his possibly Russian mother, invent distant kingdoms, imagine delicate-looking youths, or automatically write essays that start with Pope but end up about himself.  Instead, he's always Shade, and the common feature of his experiences  is a suggestion of a vision transcending his world.  When he describes himself as dividing in two, in the sleepwalking episode and the way he writes poetry, both halves are Shade, not some repressed self seeking release.
 
That must be enough for now.
 
Jerry Friedman
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