Vladimir Nabokov discusses "Lolita" part 1 of 2

Vladimir Nabokov discusses his brillant novel "Lolita" on "Close Up", a circa 1950's CBC program.

Пікірлер: 430

  • @Aristeia48
    @Aristeia4814 жыл бұрын

    One of my favorite things about this book is Humbert as the narrator, you don't know when he's telling the truth or lieing and you get the sense of a very warped mind indeed.

  • @Starward-

    @Starward-

    2 жыл бұрын

    At two points, HUmbert's truth-telling becomes very obvious: when he hears the voices of children at boisterous play, and recognizes the absence of Lolita's voice among them; and when he says his farewell to her at the end. After all his manipulative elaborations, these are authentic statements; similar to the end of Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, when the Monster, standing over his maker's corpse in Walton's cabin aboard ship, says, "This, also, is my victim"'; similar to the Monster's remorse at the unjust execution of the innocent Justine. Nabokov deploys these moments perfectly within his narrrative. My first reading of Lolita, in 1980, left me with an enormous disgust toward Humbert, and I could not reconcile that to those two moments. Four decades later, I feel sorrier toward him, although I do not and cannot justify his heinous abuse of Lolita, but I think, now, that these two moments are the points at which what little humanity he had intersects with ours.

  • @Manx123

    @Manx123

    Жыл бұрын

    Like most pseuds who just parrot what other people have said about the book, you clearly don't get it.

  • @yaneponimaunahetonado

    @yaneponimaunahetonado

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@Starward-, «Лолита» кажется мне историей большой любви. Конечно, лет мне далеко не столько же, сколько Вам (в 1980-ом даже моя мать ещё не родилась), но всё же. Тот отрывок в конце, когда «заиграло радио в лачуге Билля» и Гумберт говорит, что всё ещё любит её, даже такой, «с обезьяньим ушами» и «безнадёжно увядшей в 17-ть лет». Что Гумберт, что Долорес - два человека, действующие в мире автоматов, американских рекламных плакатов с улыбками и напомаженными волосами. Гумберта таковым делает его порочная страсть, Долли - детство. Что-то я увлёкся. Вам наверняка неинтересно читать бредни 19-летнего парня, но мне приятно, что хоть русская литература и потеряла В. В., ваша его обрела.

  • @diogodelacruz

    @diogodelacruz

    6 күн бұрын

    Why do you assume he's lying?

  • @garynouban6453

    @garynouban6453

    20 сағат бұрын

    Congratulations, you figured out what an unreliable narrator is

  • @kelman727
    @kelman72710 жыл бұрын

    Someone who equates a character with his creator has never learned to read correctly.

  • @estacoda545

    @estacoda545

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes. Thank you.

  • @Mr35diamonds

    @Mr35diamonds

    2 жыл бұрын

    It is nothing but bibliographical fallacy.

  • @OMAR-vq3yb

    @OMAR-vq3yb

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lolita is hebephilia disguised as high art. I mean he wrote a novella titled The Enchantress which was a precursor to Lolita which was pretty straight forward novella about a middle aged man who was a sexual predator without all the artsy literary stuff. Look at how he fumbles on his words from 4:35 onwards trying to make it seem like the books are really inspired by baboons and some abstract artsy idea as if it makes logical sense to make it about an old dude who has the hots for young girls LOL. Wake up people.

  • @jimbob483

    @jimbob483

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@OMAR-vq3yb Seems like you know quite a bit about the subject without ever actually reading his novels. Interesting, OMAR...

  • @NeostormXLMAX

    @NeostormXLMAX

    Жыл бұрын

    @@OMAR-vq3yb that would be based if true, sadly it isn't

  • @milascave2
    @milascave28 жыл бұрын

    writers generally don't like to be asked what their book is trying to say. They will often tell you that everything it is trying to say is in the book.

  • @williamdrouin8063

    @williamdrouin8063

    4 жыл бұрын

    Nabokov doesnt have anything to say in his books.

  • @arpitdas4263

    @arpitdas4263

    2 жыл бұрын

    But dumbasses refuse to read what we write. Sponfeed them till you die!!!

  • @Account.for.Comment

    @Account.for.Comment

    Жыл бұрын

    Not today. Too many writers today like to say their books said something about some sort of social justice, oppression or some sort of identity politics. It prevent them from creating unique characters and original plots, since it felt more like reading fanfictions or blog posts newspaper. When I was growing up, writers try create a story, and how you relate the story to the real world is the message.

  • @Account.for.Comment

    @Account.for.Comment

    Жыл бұрын

    @@williamdrouin8063 He did but the moralizing and preaching is not the point. Like Poe, he kept the themes underneath the surface of the currents.

  • @garynouban6453

    @garynouban6453

    20 сағат бұрын

    Nabokov's philosophy was that books were meant to be hedonistic experiences. He hated writers like Victor Hugo who tried to use their books to spur political/social movements. It flies in the face of the current postmodern belief that all art is meant to influence society. Nabokov's other masterpiece, Pale Fire, similarly pokes fun at how people misunderstand his art for the sake of their own interests

  • @jmpizzle8008
    @jmpizzle800811 жыл бұрын

    Nabokov is indeed uncomfortable in this interview, but mostly due to his personal fear that he would be misinterpreted, not from trying to hide some nymphet obsession. Nabokov is infatuated with butterflies and language, not nymphets; that Humbert is a pedophile is just an aspect of the novel that Nabokov came up with in a fit of artistic inspiration and planning. This is like saying that since Charles Kinbote is a stalker, liar, and thief in Pale Fire, then Nabokov must be too.

  • @Rifatbinmaruf

    @Rifatbinmaruf

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Christina R I guess he wanted to show people that monsters are real life people. No comment in this thread for 7 years. And we both comment in it on same day.

  • @Rifatbinmaruf

    @Rifatbinmaruf

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Christina R It is possible that someone close to him was a pedophile which inspired him into something like this. Frankly speaking, my best friend is a pedophile (he is 17 and likes preteen boys and girls). He himself sometimes feel guilty about his emotions but he can't help it. I try to talk him out of it and if the situation gets worse I will surely recommand him to a psychiatrist. So see I can get inspired to write about this, from their viewpoint, as I got to know things from him.

  • @Rifatbinmaruf

    @Rifatbinmaruf

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Christina R Btw this video wasn't on the youtube recommendation. I just finished reading lolita today so was researching a bit

  • @Rifatbinmaruf

    @Rifatbinmaruf

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Christina R I was reading 3 books at once (lolita, Jane Eyre and Dracula) so it took me somewhat 2 weeks to finish.

  • @Rifatbinmaruf

    @Rifatbinmaruf

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Christina R Yeah sitting here in quarantine tons of free time. True dracula is depressing but I really liked Bram Stoker's style, that he used letter, journals to tell the story.

  • @graybow2255
    @graybow22554 жыл бұрын

    I think he's a first-rate writer and unfairly criticized. Because of what I've heard and read about Lolita, I thought it'd be a second-rate popular fiction novel but it turned out to be, along with Pale Fire, among the best and most beautiful novels I've ever read.

  • @deepasanyal3989

    @deepasanyal3989

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lolita is so good I started to re-read immediately after finishing it.

  • @allyb3510

    @allyb3510

    Жыл бұрын

    @deepasanyal3989 it's a novel about a pedophile. You can paint it however you want but it's pedophilia.

  • @nfvy8111
    @nfvy81118 жыл бұрын

    The smirk on Nabokov's face when that guy said "You can't trust a creative writer to say what he has done."

  • @ChrisRalphHoward

    @ChrisRalphHoward

    7 жыл бұрын

    VII "that guy" is actually quite an accomplished writer himself. Lionel Trilling. Check him out.

  • @lesliegordon2313
    @lesliegordon23132 жыл бұрын

    Probably the most beautifully written book I have ever read.

  • @waituntilspring
    @waituntilspring16 жыл бұрын

    I'd like to say 'thank you' for uploading this piece of footage. Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov is (in my opinion) the master of prose. A writer whose talent continues to be unparalleled.

  • @katlamb4606
    @katlamb4606 Жыл бұрын

    I love how real and genuinely engaged these reviewers are. You don't see that in modern times.

  • @bellaadamowicz8380

    @bellaadamowicz8380

    11 ай бұрын

    Political correctness destroyed intellectual discussion. We live the an era of Inquisition

  • @mwilyumr
    @mwilyumr12 жыл бұрын

    Q: "How are you different from Humbert Humbert?" A: "Humbert doesn't know a hawk from a handbag - I do."

  • @anshulmanapure1980

    @anshulmanapure1980

    2 жыл бұрын

    what's hawk from a handbag?

  • @tyronedeckwad4051

    @tyronedeckwad4051

    2 жыл бұрын

    you’re replying to a 9 year old comment. You certainly can’t tell hawk from handbag.

  • @fallingapart

    @fallingapart

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@anshulmanapure1980 the comment is very old so I’ll answer, he’s saying Humbert is delusional and cannot be trusted with his accounts. So if he saw a hawk, he could think it was a handbag and vice versa

  • @lgoehl777
    @lgoehl77715 жыл бұрын

    I just listened to the audio book version of Lolita and it's so perfectly read by Jeremy Irons--he captures the nuances of Humbert Humbert's personality impeccably, and his reading of the poetic sequences will break your heart.

  • @billlane892

    @billlane892

    3 ай бұрын

    Before overpraising Jeremy Irons (who landed the Humbert role in such an awful remake ) You should hear Vladimir reading the final confrontation with Quilty. It'll blow your hair back !

  • @TheWheatless
    @TheWheatless13 жыл бұрын

    Nabokov was an absolutely amazing man. More than just his works of literature, all facets of his intelligence are incredibly astounding.

  • @curtisrunstedler
    @curtisrunstedler14 жыл бұрын

    He's so charismatic, he uses the most beautiful words conceivable

  • @bedevereknight4992
    @bedevereknight49924 жыл бұрын

    Genius writer. Absolute genius

  • @kreek22
    @kreek222 жыл бұрын

    As Trilling says "we cannot trust the creative artist to say what he has done"--Nabokov is smirking in the background as he takes in this most welcome compliment. He thought of himself as an "enchanter" above all else.

  • @HarryS77
    @HarryS7716 жыл бұрын

    Finally! I get to hear my favorite writer speak! I love how even his story of inspiration for the book is fiction. Thank you so much for finding this and uploading it.

  • @banjomusic76
    @banjomusic767 жыл бұрын

    Perhaps the best, a real master of english.

  • @peterkelnerxd7009

    @peterkelnerxd7009

    5 жыл бұрын

    banjomusic76 what do you mean by master of english???

  • @paytonking4673

    @paytonking4673

    5 жыл бұрын

    Pele Gacinovic prose

  • @kelman727

    @kelman727

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@paytonking4673 Makes too many solecisms.

  • @darcy6957

    @darcy6957

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@kelman727 Respectfully, Nabokov's "solecisms" contribute intentionally to the texture and tone of the novel. Hiding behind strict grammatical constructs as such is an irrational way to approach novels that purposefully eschew them. (Correlary: The statement "I don't like James Joyce because of his solecisms" would be absolutely bull-headed.)

  • @comradekenobi6908

    @comradekenobi6908

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ironic since he's Russian

  • @howardnorris1773
    @howardnorris17733 жыл бұрын

    Lolita is a difficult subject very well handled - the novel is satisfyingly entertaining to read thanks to its humour.

  • @harlowblackadder356
    @harlowblackadder3563 жыл бұрын

    This is amazing footage.

  • @cappy2282
    @cappy2282 Жыл бұрын

    Vladimir was a genius. Both Lolita and Pale Fire are masterpieces. Good stuff 👌

  • @jkane797
    @jkane79710 жыл бұрын

    Why do they randomly get up and move to the other table?

  • @518corky

    @518corky

    6 жыл бұрын

    J Kane more comfortable on the couch

  • @518corky

    @518corky

    6 жыл бұрын

    Also tea was on the coffee table

  • @themerge6929

    @themerge6929

    5 жыл бұрын

    Sometimes little farts make you uncomfortable; a walk slows them out.

  • @markotinio4338

    @markotinio4338

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Omar Q Best comment

  • @The_Quota_Official

    @The_Quota_Official

    3 жыл бұрын

    This comment killed me. Thank you

  • @Lambert1990
    @Lambert199016 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this.

  • @OksanaOksana1
    @OksanaOksana13 жыл бұрын

    Nabokov was very nostalgic about his childhood and he wrote a lot about it, you can see how much did he missed that part of his life. So I assume, he did associate himself with Humbert, but not as an old man , but that young boy he was when he met his first love during his stay in the family house in the country All the story is about his dreams to return to those emotions during his childhood and adolescence , his first expreince of love and sex.

  • @Tertiantoon
    @Tertiantoon4 жыл бұрын

    When Nabokov said “I think like a genius, I write like a distinguished author, and I speak like a child” I thought he was being modest. The remark was a much more honest self-assessment than I thought.

  • @sleeplaughing
    @sleeplaughing15 жыл бұрын

    I've always been in love with Nabokov's "Pale Fire". I'm not sure I've ever found such a gorgeously poetic book so hilarious...and the story is just that (at least to me), absurdly funny. Then, of course, there are many shades of gray retained within the experimental novel. John Shade's name should be telling enough. If you can't tell already, I'm a big Nabokov fan :P

  • @smokinbill
    @smokinbill13 жыл бұрын

    Ah, the art of saying a lot without saying anything.

  • @anshulmanapure1980
    @anshulmanapure19802 жыл бұрын

    Nabokov's work is dessert to my reads.

  • @Oscar301
    @Oscar30113 жыл бұрын

    wow, terrific, intense and insightful

  • @lamplighteyes
    @lamplighteyes15 жыл бұрын

    Read Dostoyevsky because he is brilliant. He is different from Nabokov in that he doesn't use language poetically, he isn't stylistically that good a writer you could say, but his stories as incredible, absolutely incredible. Start with "Notes From Underground", it's nice and short and sums up Dostoyevsky's style quite well. Or Crime and Punishment for that matter.

  • @luxianolee7497

    @luxianolee7497

    Ай бұрын

    15 years later. And I am discovering a new writer, book, and hobby. Thank you.

  • @trilobright
    @trilobright11 жыл бұрын

    Lolita has been my favorite novel since I first read it in high school, and it never occurred to me that until now I'd never even seen a picture of him. I confess I'd imagined him being a bit more dashing in the looks department, but the wit is just as I'd pictured it.

  • @Vlaqq
    @Vlaqq14 жыл бұрын

    I love his smile at 2:48 - it.s the answer to the book.

  • @DrowningArt94
    @DrowningArt9413 жыл бұрын

    i bought the book today and i am very exicited to read it!

  • @wildside316
    @wildside3163 жыл бұрын

    I was brought here after listening to "Don't stand so close to me"☺. And now I know what they mean by "the Lolita Express".

  • @toshi292929
    @toshi2929299 жыл бұрын

    The Great Master!!!!!!!

  • @chilledtorsion
    @chilledtorsion11 жыл бұрын

    trilling & nabokov in the same room. What a scene!!!

  • @AlgerLandau
    @AlgerLandau15 жыл бұрын

    My most personal favourite writer! Brilliant in all aspects. I loved "LOLITA", but there are also his magical epic-novel "ADA OR ARDOR", his magnificent and thrilling "PALE FIRE" or his beautifuly cruel "DESPAIR" and "CAMERA OBSCURA". The only novel I've not read yet is "TRANSPARENT THINGS". How is it? His short-stories are aslo something out of this world.

  • @ivankaedinger3631
    @ivankaedinger36316 ай бұрын

    Genius. I've read many other books he wrote and they are masterpieces specially Pale fire and Camera obscura (Laughter in the dark).

  • @blahblahbleebleeblah
    @blahblahbleebleeblah12 жыл бұрын

    His English is not that bad. I think he was more awkward appearing on camera, having to give quick replies to an interviewer's questions. That explains the note cards. Look up Keroac on Steve Allen. He also appears to be incredibly shy. We have to understand that back in the 50's, television was just starting up. Having cameras shoved in your face was anxiety-inducing to people not used to such public exposure Not the same now, where we've embraced the Orwellian Eye a little more.

  • @lostboy8345
    @lostboy83453 жыл бұрын

    No better master of words than Nabokov.

  • @ccceizure
    @ccceizure13 жыл бұрын

    VN explains in Strong Opinions, a book collection of interviews, that spontaneous eloquence seems to him miraculous, and that in interviews (many of them? most?) he is in fact reading from note cards, and indeed I believe some pages can be discerned in the clip!

  • @R.Kinney1492
    @R.Kinney14923 жыл бұрын

    Much is missed in Lolita without the annotated version. 🦋

  • @sebbyknight
    @sebbyknight15 жыл бұрын

    He's reading his answers from a card :( All his books are so brilliant :)

  • @GenteelCretin
    @GenteelCretin12 жыл бұрын

    Indeed, I've noticed that, in the modern literary canon, Pale Fire seems to have caught a phantom wind, pushing it retrospectively toward the front of a lot of critics lists.

  • @splendeat
    @splendeat14 жыл бұрын

    I am fascinated and disturbed by the anecdote Mr. Nabokov recounts at the end of this video about the artist-ape in the Jardin des Plantes. Does anyone know if the newspaper article Nabokov read can be found?

  • @tryharder75
    @tryharder757 ай бұрын

    such an honest chat about the best novel of the 20th century

  • @jasonelwoodphoto
    @jasonelwoodphoto4 жыл бұрын

    2:44 Wise words. This is true of all creatives.

  • @Ivorybird09
    @Ivorybird0913 жыл бұрын

    @ObeyTheSloth He was a writer, not a public speaker. As he himself stated, "I think like a genius, I write like a distinguished author, and I speak like a child". Therefore perhaps he used those cue cards. : ) I wish I could hear him speaking Russian, his native language... As for touching hearts, he wakes up imagination in his readers; many people lack imagination, while sentimentality is not that rare.

  • @literallyallthingsonice
    @literallyallthingsonice16 жыл бұрын

    GENIUS!

  • @CleverDjembe
    @CleverDjembe14 жыл бұрын

    The 1950s ROCKED!!

  • @AuthorityFigure
    @AuthorityFigure15 жыл бұрын

    My paperback version is 250 pages even. It reads quickly. The brothers karamazov I read in high school but it was over my head then. i need to go back and reread that one myself.

  • @peony.turtle
    @peony.turtle12 жыл бұрын

    @why760nitro "a book about child molestation" (I am using the exact words you used to describe this book) can help in many ways rather than just being a work of arts. first thing first, it's about knowing and understanding the thoughts going on in Humbert Humbert's mind, because it is extra hard when you try to know how people like him view the world and what leads them to do what they do. Secondly, anything can be 'fine literature' if it can pull out the core of a human being, & of a situation.

  • @Ivorybird09
    @Ivorybird0914 жыл бұрын

    @carolingianguy And what did you write, besides forum postings? Share an essay, or an article, so we can discuss and grade it here. I love how it 's always a million critics per one talented writer.

  • @sue.F
    @sue.FАй бұрын

    “The sob in the spine” Nabokov was a genius.

  • @dinnerbucket9
    @dinnerbucket916 жыл бұрын

    This footage is a treasure, a film within a film, or a trial within a trial, and at times it seems that just outside this room a firing squad awaits.

  • @RightWingCon81
    @RightWingCon8115 жыл бұрын

    i'm on chapter 16 of the first part and I must say this novel is AWESOME! THe lyrical style is engaging and after having read 2 so-called classics that were complete garbage (Catch 22 and For Whom the Bell Tolls) back to back this was a great change. Both novels were a complete bore, I counted the pages between chapters and was paralyzed by fear when the number rose above 7 with Nabokov I feel the chapters go quickly, and not just because they're mostly short.

  • @ReemTahir

    @ReemTahir

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I can't stand Hemingway...too dry and boring.

  • @AlgerLandau
    @AlgerLandau15 жыл бұрын

    Jaja, well, thanks! I'll do that as soon as I get that novel. Greetings! PD. by the way? Have you read LOOK AT THE HARLEQUINS? I recommend you that amazing novel, it's just remarkable!

  • @thepethamstar
    @thepethamstar15 жыл бұрын

    What a great clip. Is assume "Mr. Trilling" is Lionel Trilling? B.

  • @HotVoodooWitch
    @HotVoodooWitch11 жыл бұрын

    Well...I have an EXTREMELY discerning ear (have been the control for the audio component of several neural network studies) but I'll consider your comment. FWIW, I recently took great satisfaction in nailing the fact that Glenn Ford is Canadian (I believe the tip-off was "out"). I guess he should've used Lorne Greene's vocal coach.

  • @francisdashwood1760
    @francisdashwood17603 жыл бұрын

    In other words: ''Do you like little girls?'' Nabokov: I like birds more than does Humbert Humbert.

  • @jfhhghj8855
    @jfhhghj88556 жыл бұрын

    наш великий!

  • @WhatKindOfBlue
    @WhatKindOfBlue12 жыл бұрын

    I'm doing a report on this book. Does anyone know how to cite a source card for this book?

  • @RightWingCon81
    @RightWingCon8115 жыл бұрын

    Interesting you should say that, I just finished Lolita about a week ago and read Nabokov's feeling about didactic literature and how he felt literature should not impart a moral but rather it should be art to be enjoyed (paraphrasing a lot) I have to say though that i can enjoy both types of literature. I might give Dostoevsky a shot anyway.

  • @praymont
    @praymont16 жыл бұрын

    Pierre Berton (the host) conducted the interview well

  • @lohkoonhoong6957
    @lohkoonhoong69573 жыл бұрын

    Not many readers are as smart as N And Humbert to be able to work out The intricacies and clues of this tale. At the end of the day. the reader's left With the text as writer and character Vanish into the text, but each reading Sees them with more focus and attention. This Lolita must be read many times.

  • @DanLackey
    @DanLackey16 жыл бұрын

    What show was this? Great to hear Nabokov and Trilling (the latter sounding just as I have alwayd thought he would sound, but I can imagine the kiddies of today stumbling upon this and thinking it a Saturday Night Live sketch.

  • @billlane892
    @billlane8923 ай бұрын

    Am curious whether anyone recalls Lionel Trilling out of Columbia U ?? Given writers' general disdain for critics, it is telling of Trilling's stature that VN sits on par with him… btw On SoundCloud fans can listen to Nabokov reading the final scene with Quilty and it's quite a sendup of that "semi-animated subhuman trickster" You'll never be able to hear the audiobook reading by Jeremy Irons without a longing that it were VN speaking.

  • @molloyx
    @molloyx15 жыл бұрын

    uhmfar I am certain you are right [ and I am certain of everything]. In any event,this interview gives me a stronger resolution re my image of Pnin, his kindest offering.

  • @HotVoodooWitch
    @HotVoodooWitch12 жыл бұрын

    I picked up on the fact that this show was Canadian even before I noticed that it was CBC--the host said "aboot."

  • @TB-ih7bg
    @TB-ih7bg6 жыл бұрын

    Anyone who thinks that Nabokov and Humbert Humbert are "like minded" are being absolutely absurd. And 90% of the comments under this video are simply idiotic. Most seem to be from Americans trying to find a scandal in here somewhere (as usual). You see the way Lolita is written, it really does feel like the author has purposely created Humbert Humbert to be absolutely as un-relatable as possible, especially in how he pseudo-rationalises everything he does and lies to the reader. The way Lolita is portrayed in the book as being simply the impression Humbert Humbert has of her. Nabokov is so detached and artistically minded with respect to main character in this way, that he simply couldn't have been on Humbert Humbert's side. The fact that he's crafted such an unlikeable character, again, _on purpose,_ shows Nabokov obviously wasn't just trying to... whatever you think he was trying to do if he was himself a pedophile. The work ceases to make any sense if Nabokov were actually sympathetic to Humbert Humbert. He does his damnedest to make sure the reader isn't. Yes he did plenty of research on pedophiles for the creation of his main character, but in the form of academic case studies from psychological journals. Some commentators will actually attempt the pathetic joke: "oh yeah, 'research,' I bet he really enjoyed doing all of that 'research' haha wink wink." And here I must simply ask, do you really think he was sitting there with an academic journal and secretly hiding, I don't know, Nymphet Weekly, behind it like in a cartoon? He took about as much interest in the experts who studied the predator's minds as he did in the predators themselves, but there is no evidence, anywhere, that he took an interest in 'nymphets.' Nabokov was interested, as can be seen throughout his work, in the minds of other people, especially when they were so very different from his own. The subjective experiences of those whom most of us would view as being alien. Distorted realities through distorted eyes. To my own mind, art is about the communication of the subjective experience. Most authors do this by crafting a narrator who views the world much like they themselves do. You can tell when this is happening. Read Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, David Foster Wallace, Proust, all wrote in such a way that their work gives one insight into how they saw the world, and reflects on their understanding of what art _should be_ (I myself have expressed my own views on what I think art _should be_ just now). Incidentally, most praise or criticism directed at these authors stems from the reader either agreeing or disagreeing with their view of the world, or from the agree/disagree-ment of the reader with the author's version of the 'artistic ideal.' Nabokov's own artistic ideal was to make the author as invisible as possible. If you look at his literary criticisms, you will see that he 'detests' when the author projects their views onto the characters, or tries to use them as mere mouthpieces to force a moral or political message. This is why he didn't like most of Tolstoy, but for War and Peace, Anna Karenina and The Death of Ivan Ilyich, which he appreciated because they didn't try to push a Christian narrative as with Tolstoy's other works, but were much more about the characters and their humanity. He disliked all of Dostoevsky for the same reason, as everything he wrote was trying to convey a pro-Christianity message in one way or another- his work literally revolved around it. Nabokov on the other hand, wanted to explore new ground with art. How's about we don't merely try to solve the riddle of [our] humanity with art, but simply highlight that [our] humanity is more of a riddle than even we ourselves would ever want to come to terms with. This is that "tingle" or "sob" in the spine as it were.

  • @foljs5858

    @foljs5858

    5 жыл бұрын

    American puritans -- nuff said. Always on the lookout for people having fun...

  • @ref345r7

    @ref345r7

    5 жыл бұрын

    Lolita was not Nabokov's only exploration of that topic. The aesthetic beauty of nymphets was a theme he returned to again and again. As dedicated Nabokovian Martin Amis put it, "he simply enjoyed the topic too much." Either way, he's the greatest writer in modern times.

  • @alistair4462

    @alistair4462

    4 жыл бұрын

    Amazingly said.

  • @anetteeex

    @anetteeex

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yes. ❤️

  • @bossanova186

    @bossanova186

    21 күн бұрын

  • @nathanieldeclarador1466
    @nathanieldeclarador14662 жыл бұрын

    2:13 Can someone tell me the reason why Nabokov moved from his position into another? Very intriguing…

  • @QuoVadisVale
    @QuoVadisVale14 жыл бұрын

    excuse me could you please tell me what he answers at the question "what ghave you the idea of Lolita?" ? thanx (I'm not english and it's hard to understand what he says.

  • @jmpizzle8008
    @jmpizzle800811 жыл бұрын

    This was when he was in his 50s. There are quite a few pictures of him from his youth and early adulthood that are more 'dashing.'

  • @molloyx
    @molloyx14 жыл бұрын

    As much as I have enjoyed VN's work the only novel that verged on provoking any kind of 'sob in the spine' was Pnin, his most finely drawn and sympathetic character. There is not a single character in 'Lolita' [ and I agree w/ Bloom that VN too often indulged in caricature] that does not verge on the pathetic. It is an especially savage little monster executed with a jewelers eye and misanthropes temperment.

  • @HarryS77
    @HarryS7715 жыл бұрын

    Literature as a koan for moral reading. Or maybe not just moral reading, but any reading that supposes meaning, an outside meaning. I like that, good point.

  • @guinnesstrail
    @guinnesstrail15 жыл бұрын

    Pierre Berton with his trademark bow-tie is the interviewer. A great personality in his own write. There was a time when the CBC was the intended medium. I would like to think that McLuhan was influenced by CBC content when he first wrote about the message. You don't see anything like this nowadays. Oh, and Nabokov is none too shabby either.

  • @AlgerLandau
    @AlgerLandau15 жыл бұрын

    Jajaja well, I understand you perfectly, so is mine. ADA OR ARDOR is probably the most perfect novel I've ever read. ADA and PALE FIRE, actually. You got excellent tastes, I can tell. Greeting! :)

  • @paulkimpaul
    @paulkimpaul14 жыл бұрын

    @GnawOnAaBrick Well, he did learn it in his childhood, but certainly he didn't write in it for many years.

  • @chess-ter8633
    @chess-ter86334 жыл бұрын

    from William F. Buckley's Eulogy - He reminisces about his declination of my bid to go on Firing Line. It would have taken me two weeks of preparation, he says almost proudly, reminding me of his well-known rule against improvising. Every word he ever spoke before an audience had been written out and memorized, he assured me-isn’t that right, Vera? Well no, he would answer questions in class extemporaneously. Well obviously! He laughed. He could hardly program his students to ask questions to which he had the answers prepared! I demur: His extemporaneous style is fine, just fine; ah, he says, but before an audience, or before one of those . . . television . . . cameras, he would freeze. He ordered a brandy, and in a few minutes we rose, and he and Vera and I walked ever so slowly to the doors. “As long as Western civilization survives,” Christopher Lehmann-Haupt wrote in the Times last Tuesday, “his reputation is safe. Indeed, he will probably emerge as one of the greatest artists our century has produced.” I said goodbye warmly, embracing Vera, taking his hand, knowing that probably I would never see again-never mind the artist-this wonderful human being.

  • @tryharder75
    @tryharder7512 жыл бұрын

    anyone got a date for this iv?

  • @teflonmagnet
    @teflonmagnet16 жыл бұрын

    well....this is ridiculously cool.

  • @nfvy8111
    @nfvy81118 жыл бұрын

    It's also funny because Nabokov's voice totally changes when he speaks in a different language

  • @fartamplifer
    @fartamplifer14 жыл бұрын

    Can you imagine CBS (or any network) putting on a show like this today? We need more intelligent TV like this.

  • @roughhabit9085

    @roughhabit9085

    2 жыл бұрын

    He should have gone on Firing Line. He was a huge Bill Buckley fan.

  • @jwmchannels
    @jwmchannels14 жыл бұрын

    @caramelizeme Yes, it's how the name is correctly pronounced.

  • @RightWingCon81
    @RightWingCon8115 жыл бұрын

    I WANT to like hemingway, so, I'll take yur advise and read it when I'm done with lolita. Well, actually I was going to read the brothers karamazov. How long is the sun also rises? I know TBK is a door stopper at 800plus pages.

  • @charold3
    @charold39 ай бұрын

    The other guy is Lionel Trilling, an important critic.

  • @WhatKindOfBlue
    @WhatKindOfBlue12 жыл бұрын

    Sorry, my bad. Source card for this video? >_< *not paying much attention apparently.

  • @leisurelylisa6427
    @leisurelylisa64272 жыл бұрын

    Interesting

  • @lexo30
    @lexo3015 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating interview! The interviewer clearly wants to get VN to own up to something which is not there for VN to own up to. No wonder he disliked interviews in later life.

  • @DmitriChoulanov
    @DmitriChoulanov4 жыл бұрын

    it's interesting now

  • @aleshkaemelyanov
    @aleshkaemelyanov11 ай бұрын

    Армянин и славянка . 😊😊😊😊😊 Я не имею средств наличных, машин, костюмов и домов, хотя мой вид вполне приличный, прочёл три дюжины томов. Я полон сотнями стараний, сплетеньем мыслей и острот, исканьем между осознаний и кладом внутренних красот. Я меховой, как пёс безродный, разумный, тёплый и простой, и справедливый, беспородный с татуированной средой. Так вот позвольте, мисс благая, без роз, колье, богатств иных, средь рестораций, улиц мая Вас пригласить в мир грёз моих!

  • @koudinov
    @koudinov16 жыл бұрын

    Funny how Wladimir tried to escape from talking about "touching hearts and minds" and "messages". How desperatehe he was rushing to the salutary sofa, but...the attempt feailed, the refugee was caught up and totured by way of listening to the bookenist opinion on "Lolita". After such a cruel punishment Nabokov gave up, and finally began to explain the aim of the book...

  • @tryharder75
    @tryharder7512 жыл бұрын

    what's with N's notes?

  • @stylincarrie1
    @stylincarrie12 жыл бұрын

    2:10 So Nabokov just gets up and moves to the couch. C'mon boys, let's get cozy on the setee. Staging for tv shows was still in it's infancy. Newscasters in the early 50s used to get up, walk around, sit on the front desk and use pointers on maps all while reading the news.

  • @anfearglas
    @anfearglas13 жыл бұрын

    What does Nabokov say at the very start while giving his definition of philistines?

  • @ccceizure
    @ccceizure15 жыл бұрын

    It is true that he was probably reading from notecards, or that he'd memorized his responses. He admits this in Strong Opinions; he calls spontaneous eloquence a miracle and admits that he used notecards in some filmed interview. Anyway, the story about the poor creature drawing its cage is completely invented by VN! Finally, this was the first time I'd heard his voice. whaaat a playa. I was expecting a deeper, richer, more intimidating voice, though..

  • @molloyx
    @molloyx16 жыл бұрын

    Gass? I vaguely remember him speculating that a certain author wanted only [ vaguely, I said] 'to rise so high that when he shat he wouldn't miss anyone'. Also fondly remember him on certain panels with Barthelme, Walker Percy and Grace Paley. Anyway, perhaps it is the 'anxiety of influence' that lead to so many versions of attempted patricide?

  • @molloyx
    @molloyx15 жыл бұрын

    I remember rte 66 from childhood, the TV series I mean. Dimly. Low slung cars and an endless strip of 2 lane black-top. Nothing else. Also, I have travelled across the county countless times, mostly during the, um , Aquairian migrations, and even then remember the serial monuments, often tricked out as motels, to all manner of American kitsch [ bold and backwards and unsahamed]. Wig Wams, Dinsosaur Parking Lots, Dali-esque Cowboy Hats serving as a roof structures, Elephantine Cacti Neon Dice

  • @Black.Sabbath
    @Black.Sabbath2 ай бұрын

    A touch of the Philip Larkin about him

  • @molloyx
    @molloyx15 жыл бұрын

    Lolita is a devious and snarky delight I look forward to reading again. But the greatest writer of English prose since Shakespeare? Nabokov is a brilliant stylist, but all too often his characters are deliberate caricatures, verging on the apsychological [ PNIN stands as an exception], pinned to the page, never to surprise but always to satisfy the authors imperious misanthropy. He is, in short, an elegant sadist.

  • @candleclow4316
    @candleclow43163 жыл бұрын

    I like his voice his voice is like st cloud from venture bros