There's a chapter on Lolita in Benjamin Widiss's 2011 book Obscure Invitations, as described below:
Literary studies in the postwar era have consistently barred attributing
specific intentions to authors based on textual evidence or ascribing
textual presences to the authors themselves. Obscure Invitations
argues that this taboo has blinded us to fundamental elements of
twentieth-century literature. Widiss focuses on the particularly
self-conscious constructions of authorship that characterize modernist
and postmodernist writing, elaborating the narrative strategies they
demand and the reading practices they yield. He reveals that apparent
manifestations of "the death of the author" and of the "free play" of
language are performances that ultimately affirm authorial control of
text and reader. The book significantly revises received understandings
of central texts by Faulkner, Stein, and Nabokov. It then discusses
Eggers' Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius and the films Seven and The Usual Suspects, demonstrating that each is a highly self-aware rebuttal of the notion of authorial absence.
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Susan Elizabeth Sweeney
Co-Editor, NABOKV-L