Nabokov in Montreux: 1965 Interview

Robert Hughes interviews Vladimir Nabokov in September 1965 in Montreux, Switzerland.

Пікірлер: 166

  • @immaterialimmaterial5195
    @immaterialimmaterial5195Күн бұрын

    What a wonderful portrait of this great man. His writing is exquisite. What an incredible life.

  • @grigoryborodavkin1730
    @grigoryborodavkin1730 Жыл бұрын

    His humor was delightful. He was delightful. But you knew that too.

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    Жыл бұрын

    You're welcome. Thank you for subscribing.

  • @larrycarr4562
    @larrycarr456211 ай бұрын

    Nice to see the man behind the writings… an intimate delight.

  • @iridule
    @iridule Жыл бұрын

    Really can't appreciate this enough, Dr. Shrayer. So few interviews of Nabokov appear online so it's such a treat to see this extended interview. Thanky, thanky, thanky!

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank so much you for subscribing

  • @fiorellafenati5395
    @fiorellafenati539511 ай бұрын

    undoubtedly the greatest writer of the 20th century, Lolita, a book so complex that it would take at least 3 readings. A great wonderful writer.

  • @varvarvarvarvarvar

    @varvarvarvarvarvar

    11 ай бұрын

    It would take you a lifetime to figure how it relates and expands on Pnin.

  • @vicomtedevalmont1073
    @vicomtedevalmont107311 ай бұрын

    This is definitely the most 'intimate' capturing of Nabokov on camera... It's nice to get a glimpse into his daily life + mannerisms LOL. Thanks for sharing this + doing the scholarly work you do on Nabokov as well. Very enlightening.

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing.

  • @dajoker8998

    @dajoker8998

    7 ай бұрын

    Pedo

  • @edgarpontes8247
    @edgarpontes824711 ай бұрын

    As Mr Nabokov concerning his interviews, no words come to me as I try to express my gratitude for this video. It's a rare experience to watch this great writer speaking for himself.

  • @trevorbailey1486
    @trevorbailey148611 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much for posting this rewarding interview. I had the pleasure of staying in the Hotel Fairmont Le Montreux Palace in 2014. I sought it out in homage to this remarkable man. The foyer is (thankfully) unchanged. The helpful staff took me on a tour of the whole floor across which the Nabokovs lived, serving them then as an apartment. (And I can imagine what the writer, who prized peace of mind so highly, would have had to say about being woken at 2am by the nearby nightclub.)

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @iLuvSirin
    @iLuvSirin7 ай бұрын

    i love him so much 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

  • @stratovation1474
    @stratovation147411 ай бұрын

    What a gem! Like Von Neumann, little on film of brilliant and difficult lives. Insight into life and creativity.

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @anaklasis
    @anaklasis Жыл бұрын

    FINALLY, after so many years and I was starting to doubt did I really watch this film...again in KZread! Sir, you have my deepest gratitude. Hats off!

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    11 ай бұрын

    My pleasure. Thank you for subscribing.

  • @beatrixvantil8623
    @beatrixvantil862311 ай бұрын

    thank you for sharing , brilliant and kind Nabokov💟 , I can't agree more with his thoughts on Freud

  • @sreehari_nair_rediff
    @sreehari_nair_rediff11 ай бұрын

    This is one of those very rare video interviews, perhaps the only one (Dmitri Nabokov alludes to this one in a documentary), that VN had given without the aid of carefully prepared notes. And if you are astute about it, you can see that the characteristic Nabokovian Pride was essentially a lightness of spirit, a love of life, transfigured by matchless verbal dexterity.

  • @liammcooper

    @liammcooper

    11 ай бұрын

    Agreed

  • @philalethes216

    @philalethes216

    10 ай бұрын

    Well put

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for subscribing

  • @erwinwoodedge4885
    @erwinwoodedge488511 ай бұрын

    So glad to hear him mention Salinger and Updike!

  • @claudiamanta1943
    @claudiamanta194311 ай бұрын

    Delightful on so many levels. Thank you for sharing. 😊

  • @dennisbento7440
    @dennisbento744011 ай бұрын

    This was outstanding. Thank You Maxim for finding it.

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @annasper
    @annasper7 ай бұрын

    Thanks so much Maxim for posting this wonderful interview. So many unexpected surprises. VN sweet and vulnerable? Who would have thought ? He hides nothing. Just look at his pleasure with his cards and that Florentine pencil . Or calling his Lolita editions pretty. VN actually using the word ´pretty´? Not to forget his child like happiness in the chess game with his wife. It was especially good to hear him describe his writing process as never smooth sailing. Anna

  • @StephenDedalus74
    @StephenDedalus749 ай бұрын

    Wooooooooooooooooow !!!! At last !!!! I have been looking for years for this interview !!! This is the perfect birthday present so thank you so much !!!!! :)

  • @dmitriy2853
    @dmitriy285311 ай бұрын

    Важно было услышать голос Владимира Набокова и видеть ,чтобы почувствовать его как человека. Спасибо! Его точная эмоционально поэзия для мыслящих людей неповторима, человеческая редкость. Ей мало уделяется внимания, вывод конечно неутешительный.

  • @dedalus1289
    @dedalus128911 ай бұрын

    thanks for posting this. Such a treat.

  • @claudiamanta1943
    @claudiamanta194311 ай бұрын

    The beginning is absolutely epic. EPIC. 😄

  • @nuccicaggiati5625
    @nuccicaggiati56258 ай бұрын

    Simply extraordinary! Thank you

  • @JAI_8
    @JAI_8 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks very much for posting this!

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    Жыл бұрын

    My pleasure. Happy you subscribed.

  • @anthonychase4364
    @anthonychase436411 ай бұрын

    What a delight. Thanks for posting.

  • @alexastep
    @alexastep11 ай бұрын

    Truly thankful for sharing such wonderful interview with us! 🧡

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @vangelisanna
    @vangelisanna18 күн бұрын

    thank you for uploading this!

  • @hanawana
    @hanawana11 ай бұрын

    what a gem thank you!

  • @haileyuki5129
    @haileyuki512911 ай бұрын

    very enjoyable, thanks for posting!

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing.

  • @orvitusmagnus54
    @orvitusmagnus5411 ай бұрын

    This interview was very pleasant, especially in these troubled times! Very interesting a true citizen of the world! RIP Vladimir 🙏🙏🙏🙏 Where was I then in 1965, oh yes, in elementary school! I find it a very moving and profound interview!

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @MrUndersolo
    @MrUndersolo11 ай бұрын

    I am so glad this is up! Never knew he was on film at this time...

  • @qamarm1831
    @qamarm183111 ай бұрын

    Well , it's so nice to watch this live interview, much delighted . I have great appreciation for his writing, he made romantic tragedy an epic by the notions he held. Thank you very much for showing it .

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @thomasbell7033
    @thomasbell703311 ай бұрын

    Thank you so very much for posting this. I didn't even know it existed before the algorithm translated my passion for Martin Amis'work into a similar one for VN. Upon Amis' death I went bingeing on interviews he gave. Apparently, many of us did this.

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    11 ай бұрын

    Many thanks for subscribing.

  • @jonharrison9222

    @jonharrison9222

    5 күн бұрын

    Amis’s introduction to the Everyman edition of Lolita is definitive. I think he reprinted it in The War Against Cliche.

  • @ivankaedinger3631
    @ivankaedinger36315 ай бұрын

    Great video, thank you. His wife was so beautiful. I still keep letter she sent me in 1988. Such a nice woman she was.

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much.

  • @lucasventer
    @lucasventer8 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much.

  • @ivanpenkov2612
    @ivanpenkov261211 ай бұрын

    Thank you Dr. Shrayer, for giving us the chance to enjoy Nabokov's presence at our homes!!

  • @mrvujinovicm
    @mrvujinovicm11 ай бұрын

    What a pleasure to see the old master talk about his work and his process, to see him acting so casual. Thank you very much for this video!

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @tryharder75
    @tryharder756 ай бұрын

    His control of my language is the closest to music i have ever read such beauty

  • @dasglasperlenspiel10
    @dasglasperlenspiel1011 ай бұрын

    Oh thank you, thank you, thank you!

  • @josebenito15
    @josebenito1511 ай бұрын

    Great Video. Thanks so much for uploading this. Not many interviews with Nabokov, not many documentaries either. One of the greatest writers in English language.. And English wasn't his mother tongue language 📖

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @josebenito15

    @josebenito15

    10 ай бұрын

    @@shrayerm You welcome and Greetings from Spain

  • @AlikaLi357

    @AlikaLi357

    3 ай бұрын

    English was more native to him than Russian. He spoke Russian tongue-tied and with an accent since childhood. His aristocratic family spoke English and French, and he only began learning Russian as a teenager. He often formed Russian words by adding Russian suffixes to English roots. In this video you can hear that, speaking Russian, he cannot pronounce the Russian sound “r” correctly. And his own translation of “Lolita” into Russian is funny and terrible. He brought out the obsolete Russian language from emigration. For example, he translated “jeans” as “blue cowboy pants,” although in Russia “jeans” are called jeans.

  • @user-qt9jw1ih9t

    @user-qt9jw1ih9t

    Ай бұрын

    You are fundamentally wrong. Nabokov spoke Russian very well, and he said that he had no native language, but thought more often in Russian. Now to " the jeans", the first jeans appeared in the USSR at the end of the 50s, in the mid-60s they became popular. He translated the book in 1967, he translated this phrase very accurately, and the key word here for the soviet reader is “cowboy”. Я по-манере письма вижу, что вы русскоязычная, поэтому продолжу на этом языке, дабы вам было более понятно. Вы описываете его со "своей колокольни", так получилось, что моя жизнь с 6 лет сплошные переезды, в итоге 3 языка, на которых я спокойно из'ясняюсь, но не стоит путать разговорную речь и лит. письменную - это раз. Во-вторых, ну не перевод это в вашем обыденном понимании, Не Перевод, человек написавший худ. произ. его не переводит, а пишет как бы заново, на другом доступном ему языке с оглядкой на оригинал.

  • @hanawana
    @hanawana11 ай бұрын

    enjoyed every second

  • @countfurioso7589
    @countfurioso758911 ай бұрын

    Beautiful find.

  • @troygaspard6732
    @troygaspard673211 ай бұрын

    This is wonderful and very intimate.

  • @tarnopol
    @tarnopol11 ай бұрын

    Huge upload!

  • @TheAj253
    @TheAj25311 ай бұрын

    I love that he detests humility. A truly sardonic soul with a unique zest for life.

  • @stuartwray6175

    @stuartwray6175

    11 ай бұрын

    very Nietzschean

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @appidydafoo
    @appidydafoo4 ай бұрын

    Thank you

  • @user-wt6ft2zn7k
    @user-wt6ft2zn7k11 ай бұрын

    Thank you, Dr. Shrayer, for the opportunity and pleasure not only to read this interview but also to watch it. If you have in possession the video of interview to Mossman and can upload it as well, that would be very kind of you.

  • @csaracho2009

    @csaracho2009

    11 ай бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/h5ao2LmnpsW-hKg.html

  • @bbailey17b
    @bbailey17b10 ай бұрын

    I'd understood/read that he insisted on having questions submitted in advance, so as to prepare his answers and read out responses. So this surprises me.

  • @annemcleod8505
    @annemcleod850511 ай бұрын

    Such a treat, thank you!

  • @jamesnicol3831
    @jamesnicol383111 ай бұрын

    fascinating in subject and presentation

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @nickboldewskul2136
    @nickboldewskul21368 ай бұрын

    Nabokov is more relaxed here without index cards than he was with Trilling on the program "Close Up" discussing Lolita with index cards. There's also a dearth of televised interviews with his younger cousin, Nicolas Nabokov; a composer, cultural ambassador, and friend of Stravinsky.

  • @lydiagreen6698
    @lydiagreen66987 күн бұрын

    Nabokov played soccer is so wholesome

  • @robkeeleycomposer
    @robkeeleycomposer3 ай бұрын

    I love this man.

  • @timelanguid4813
    @timelanguid48134 ай бұрын

    Read once Nabokov said he had never been drunk. He was drinking wine here which obviously does not mean he was lying. He must know when to call it a night. Nice to see him playing football. I read he played football as a goalkeeper in England. Interesting man in many ways.

  • @jesuisravi
    @jesuisravi11 ай бұрын

    I remember watching interviews of this sort back in the 60's on WTTW channel 11 in Chicago. I was a kid with a nose for this kind of thing.

  • @kebabtvrtkic4299
    @kebabtvrtkic42994 ай бұрын

    Уважаемый Максим Давидович - спасибо за замечательное видео (а так же, за вашу книгу "Бунин-Набоков")

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    4 ай бұрын

    Большое спасибо. С наступающим Новым годом.

  • @User-bl5cw
    @User-bl5cw9 ай бұрын

    (21:30) Imagine being the kid who got to play football with Vladimir Nabokov

  • @recoveringscot3587
    @recoveringscot358711 ай бұрын

    "...like a hypnotised person making love to a chair." Wonderful.

  • @jonharrison9222
    @jonharrison92225 күн бұрын

    Seems to have been humbler and more genial than his writing suggests.

  • @tarjeik7162
    @tarjeik716211 ай бұрын

    A real LEGEND🤩💪🙏🏻😇

  • @mortalclown3812
    @mortalclown3812 Жыл бұрын

    I had no idea he learned English first: I always thought his books were even more brilliant in light of the fact that he was Russian. He's still a total genius...😂 The world is richer for his life. Amazing upload. Rest in paradise, V.

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    Жыл бұрын

    SO glad you enjoyed, and thank you for subscribing.

  • @user-gx7gl3so1t

    @user-gx7gl3so1t

    11 ай бұрын

    This, of course, is an exaggeration, or rather mythology, the first was Russian, then English, then French😊

  • @AlikaLi357

    @AlikaLi357

    3 ай бұрын

    Not quite so, in his aristocratic family they spoke English and French, but he knew Russian poorly and began to study only as a teenager, spoke with an accent, confusing Russian and English words.

  • @gurbbyy6252
    @gurbbyy6252Ай бұрын

    wow

  • @rogerkeizerstein6147
    @rogerkeizerstein614711 ай бұрын

    Funny guy!

  • @larrycarr4562
    @larrycarr456211 ай бұрын

    “Cheated creation, by creating something yourself …”

  • @seanmccarthy8879
    @seanmccarthy887911 ай бұрын

    he talk about working on a novel about time...in which a seemingly scholarly essay on time morphs into the story. does anyone know if that was ever completed?

  • @jaypaulharrison9029

    @jaypaulharrison9029

    11 ай бұрын

    In a sense, yes. I believe 'The Texture of Time' is the name of the lecture Van Veen gives in the fourth chapter of Ada or Ardor.

  • @seanmccarthy8879

    @seanmccarthy8879

    11 ай бұрын

    @@jaypaulharrison9029 thanks, haven't read that one in years...I'll have to give it another read

  • @gautamchoudhury7622

    @gautamchoudhury7622

    11 ай бұрын

    Ada or ardour?

  • @stuartwray6175

    @stuartwray6175

    11 ай бұрын

    He 'talked'; 'talks' about ...

  • @seanmccarthy8879

    @seanmccarthy8879

    11 ай бұрын

    @@stuartwray6175 do you really spend your time correcting typos on youtube comments? smh

  • @adampowell5376
    @adampowell537611 ай бұрын

    If we did not already have Lolita I do not think that it could be published today.

  • @DerAleksan
    @DerAleksan11 ай бұрын

    05:08 Набоков читает по русски!

  • @Anicius_
    @Anicius_11 ай бұрын

    How in the f could google know i started reading Nabokov today? I havent searched for anything related to Nabokov here and i am getting recommendations both here and google homepage. Its kind of creepy. Last week youtube suggested me a video on laura melvey' visual pleasure and narrative cinema after i purchased a book which had that article in it. Wtf?

  • @keithm257
    @keithm25711 ай бұрын

    who was between kafka and proust? couldn't understand..!

  • @Valgant

    @Valgant

    11 ай бұрын

    "Петербург" Андрея Белого Petersburg by Andrey Belyi, a great russian writer

  • @keithm257

    @keithm257

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Valgant thank you… will see if I can’t find him in translation

  • @nickwyatt9498

    @nickwyatt9498

    11 ай бұрын

    Make sure you get the 1980s translation published by Penguin. It's first-rate. There was an earlier US version translated by two academics in the 70s which was rubbish, as well as leaving out great chunks of the novel. The Penguin version comes with indispensable notes at the back which explain a lot of the wordplay lost in translation. Hope you enjoy it - it really is a great novel.

  • @keithm257

    @keithm257

    11 ай бұрын

    @@nickwyatt9498 thanks… was pretty hard to find and unsure which edition I got but looked like 80’s cover art and is penguin so will find out soon when it arrives

  • @lohkoon
    @lohkoon5 ай бұрын

    There was a writer named V Nabokov Who wrote a tale about a little girl; A sex book - that's what you are thinking of! And into great fame did its writer hurl. The book enriched him; he lived like a prince: He'd talked about nothing else ever since.

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    5 ай бұрын

    Genius

  • @hajirizayev7374
    @hajirizayev737411 ай бұрын

    O.f.i.g.e.t.🤦🏻‍♂️ I could never imagine I would see Nabokov speaking English.

  • @No-0ne-is-Alone
    @No-0ne-is-Alone10 ай бұрын

    Didn't know he disliked Freud.

  • @hanawana
    @hanawana11 ай бұрын

    22:59

  • @dhoraray1310
    @dhoraray131011 ай бұрын

    Окey. But there's a touch of his mother tongue. Russian feels.

  • @nledaig
    @nledaig11 ай бұрын

    Of course he wouldn't like the word or concept: humility

  • @Diagnoc
    @Diagnoc11 ай бұрын

    His French is good.

  • @liammcooper
    @liammcooper11 ай бұрын

    calling updike an artist and faulkner 'corn-cobby' is peak nabokov

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @tbwatch88
    @tbwatch8811 ай бұрын

    and good old Vlad, my favourite writer save Tolstoy, claimed he was never ever drunk. hahaha. and that he detested music. but not film, mates. not film.

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @SciMoTeAr
    @SciMoTeAr11 ай бұрын

    Who is he?

  • @SergeFernandez-wg4hp

    @SergeFernandez-wg4hp

    11 ай бұрын

    One of the the most significant writers of 20th century

  • @abelardog6780

    @abelardog6780

    10 ай бұрын

    No, no.

  • @jasonlynn1017
    @jasonlynn101711 ай бұрын

    Nabokov's attack on Freud instantiates the very Philistinism he condemned in one of his better writings of lthat title; worse, that a genius like Nabokov had to "take second jobs" and "eek out a living proves that Philistinery has in fact won the Kulturkampf. But Freud was as far from Medieval as Voltaire, dear master novelist, and your "dreams" are up for penalty, but if you grant hypnosis, mental cause, and the Unconscious exist, which you just did when savaging Mann, well gee you are a Freudian.

  • @claudiamanta1943

    @claudiamanta1943

    11 ай бұрын

    You sound like Jordan Peterson (it’s up to you to take it as a compliment or not 😄). Freud was not Medieval, he was a cave man. With an umbrella. The question is not whether he and Jung were right (oh, the terrible reality that we live in a world which reveres quantum physics as much as psychoanalysis as divinely true, hence normative! 😄), but what they have been chosen to be ‘right’ for, over other (I should say more constructive) paradigms.

  • @jasonlynn1017

    @jasonlynn1017

    11 ай бұрын

    @@claudiamanta1943 Magical thinking is not a more constructive paradigm, it's a regression to semi- infancy. Rhetoric like "constructive" begs the question as well, as what is being constructed is the laughable politics of ego fellation parading as science. Compliment? River Jordan? Ha. I have original theories, several, Monseigneur Peterson has not even one, not one I've heard but cannot listen to common sense values posing as truth: truth has no moral, no innate valuations. Peety, like most pop intellectuals neither understands nor can coherently explain Freud's theory. Neither can Richard Dawkins, but that's the consequence of pretending all biological causation happens at the micro level: fallacy deluxe, and a phallic narcissist territories- dispute. Siggy was not a caveman. My God. He and Sophocles discovered the greatest truth about human nature and 99% of humanity is not adult enough to know so. I suggest you read Freud from the late 1930s, and his heirs Otto Fenichel, Jeanne Lampl De Groot. Read the texts and drop the dogma. Nearly all that is said about Freud is dead wrong. Jung is not even a scientist or proper philosopher after 1914, and by his theory of THE SHADOW he had lapsed into a dissociative psychosis defined by Aggression Mania and Megalomania, his theory of The Shadow ( with apologies to Orson Welles) is literally the personification of his own mental illness, and its conversion into a "theory" which as it lacks even falsifiability, qualifies Jung as a foremost kook-mystic of the era, as was W. Reich after 1936 with the zany Orgone, the erotic cosmic energy (Fourrier and Empedocles beat him to that beat off). Too bad. Reich's was a vast and great mind and his diagnosis of Character Armor from retentive neurosis was a great discovery still not fully understood in this age of the philistine and fame-fuckery-fakery. But the early Reich of Character Analysis far surpassed in sheer genius anything by Jung. Reich from 1925-33 was one of the greatest discovers of human nature to live. Just ask Darwin. But I did take the time to reply to you given your obvious and deep intellect. But I really shouldn't blow it social media which is not very social and vile as media. Ciao, In Venerea Veritas. At least I made art of of my ideas as shown on my KZread channel but I need to go back to writing prose and real books

  • @jasonlynn1017

    @jasonlynn1017

    11 ай бұрын

    @@claudiamanta1943 More simply: the difference between me and Jordan Peterson is between Diogenes and Ann Landers

  • @dajoker8998

    @dajoker8998

    8 ай бұрын

    Freud more like Fraud

  • @jasonlynn1017

    @jasonlynn1017

    8 ай бұрын

    @@dajoker8998 Oh boy, pun as proof. Yeah, humans are full of rational consciousness, free will and self made egos, especially for cheap as hominem from illiterates who cannot even correctly recite Freud's theories, or Darwin's for that matter. Go back to Gloria Steinem, or, The Bible and Fox news. Those are The American Choice.

  • @speakrussian6779
    @speakrussian677910 ай бұрын

    He was a snob but at the end of his life he accomplished what he wanted to have: to live in a palace and to be served. 😀

  • @mrmillcake8525
    @mrmillcake852511 ай бұрын

    I didn't know he spoke with a burr in Russian.

  • @Petrarka17

    @Petrarka17

    11 ай бұрын

    A sign of aristocratic upbringing

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing

  • @ivan5595
    @ivan55955 ай бұрын

    His dad was killed by Sergey Taboritsky

  • @krishnabhatt3377
    @krishnabhatt33778 ай бұрын

    Translating his own work in his first language? Lol.

  • @havefunbesafe
    @havefunbesafe7 ай бұрын

    Nabokov was in denial about his Freudian tendencies by virtue of his novel Lolita.

  • @restlessdream8745

    @restlessdream8745

    3 ай бұрын

    No, he was mocking Freud in "Lolita"

  • @0pieamii
    @0pieamii11 ай бұрын

    So glad he understood Freud was crazy, Jung not far behind.

  • @fashion010101
    @fashion010101Ай бұрын

    English version of Lolita is much better. I've read it in both Russian and English.

  • @vitiachao9765
    @vitiachao976510 ай бұрын

    7:45 ¡Qué snob más insoportable! Mira que llamar estúpida (asinine) "La muerte en Venecia" de Thomas Mann. Pura envidia porque, a diferencia de Mann, a él no le dieron el Premio Nobel. La misma envidia él sentía de los Premios Nobel de Iván Bunin, Faulkner y Pasternak.

  • @harveyrichman7742
    @harveyrichman77423 ай бұрын

    Faulkner was the greatest American novelist since Twain. He uniquely and brilliantly spoke about race and the South that maybe only an American born here could understand. I disagree with Nabokov’s assessment of Faulkner.

  • @timelanguid4813
    @timelanguid48134 ай бұрын

    Buying the English Times and Telegraph newspapers.

  • @OssaGhalyoun
    @OssaGhalyoun11 ай бұрын

    Why did he steal Lolita from Heinz von Lichberg.

  • @sonjak8265

    @sonjak8265

    11 ай бұрын

    He did not steal it. He got inspired by it.

  • @jonharrison9222
    @jonharrison92225 күн бұрын

    Each to his own, but if Maxim Gorky (especially My Childhood) and Thomas Mann are ‘mediocrities’ then I’m the Last King of Scotland.

  • @cathylegg530
    @cathylegg53011 ай бұрын

    Came across to me as a bit full of himself... particularly when reading from his own paedophilic novel

  • @indiosveritas
    @indiosveritas11 ай бұрын

    Pompous and unpleasant. Would move away to another table at the Café Odeon if he had come in , as would my writer friends.

  • @dhoraray1310

    @dhoraray1310

    11 ай бұрын

    You know his father was a member of the Russian government before the October revolution after which the Nabokov family had to flee. In emigration his father was killed when on some political parties meeting in Germany if I can remember properly. Shot blank point by some эссер party member right into the heart. At a very close distance.

  • @nickwyatt9498

    @nickwyatt9498

    11 ай бұрын

    Pompous and unpleasant? My dear fellow, don't be so hard on yourself!

  • @ronaldjost6316

    @ronaldjost6316

    8 ай бұрын

    We read some of his work when I was undergrad at Cornell U. Pnin. I guess he was still alive at the time.

  • @ecce_homo7991
    @ecce_homo799110 ай бұрын

    even after decades of living in the west he didn't develop an accent when he spoke russian

  • @shrayerm

    @shrayerm

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you for subscribing.

  • @CriticalDispatches
    @CriticalDispatches11 ай бұрын

    I wonder, what did he mean when he referred to Freud as 'Medieval'?

  • @yohanessaputra9274

    @yohanessaputra9274

    11 ай бұрын

    I think it has to do with Freud's psychosexual theory and how this theory is to describe the unconcious part of the mind. A science of the unconscious, if you will. I think Nabokov is right, that is medieval, in the sense that it's backward.

  • @CriticalDispatches

    @CriticalDispatches

    11 ай бұрын

    @@yohanessaputra9274 Yes, I understand that it was related to his theories and had suspected that it was he thought they were, as you say, backward, but I hoped there would be more to it than that.

  • @timetraveller717

    @timetraveller717

    11 ай бұрын

    @@CriticalDispatches I also did not get that Medieval reference…Can’t see how possibly Freud could be medieval. In Middle Ages they were extremely pious while the Freudian theory was revolutionary in the sense that he connected psychological disturbances with sexuality.

  • @nikolaynovichkov166

    @nikolaynovichkov166

    11 ай бұрын

    In the meaning of "mystical", I believe. He considered Freud a charlatan, akin to a fortune teller, having nothing in common with science - hence the word.

  • @cathylegg530

    @cathylegg530

    11 ай бұрын

    Considered Freud as obsessed with sexual transgression as the Inquisition