Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0009185, Sat, 17 Jan 2004 11:02:53 -0800

Subject
Olson paper, not dissertation
Date
Body
EDNOTE. Mea culpa, not Mr. Olson's
----- Original Message -----
From: Jamie L. Olson
To: D. Barton Johnson
Sent: Saturday, January 17, 2004 10:16 AM
Subject: Re: Fw: Improbable Uses of VN...


This was actually not a dissertation at all, but an undergraduate research paper that I wrote several years ago at the College of St. Scholastica (http://www.css.edu/) in Duluth, Minnesota, while enrolled in the McNair Scholars Program (http://www.css.edu/depts/mcnair/about.htm).

Jamie Olson
Ph.D. student, English
The University of Michigan

At 06:43 PM 01/16/2004 -0800, you wrote:

DEAR J.O.
----------------- Message requiring your approval (27 lines) ------------------
It would be helpful to know what university this diss was written at.

Scott Baxter
-----------------------------------
>
>
The "Real" Lives of Vladimir Nabokov: A Critique of Three Novels
>
> Jamie L. Olson, English
>
> Thomas Zelman, Ph.D., Department of English
>
> ABSTRACT
>
> The distinction between truth and fiction in the interpretation
> of literature is not always clear, particularly in light of the
> reader's tendency to subjectively "read into" the text information
> that may not be intrinsic. In the novels Lolita, Pale Fire, and The
> Real Life of Sebastian Knight, Vladimir Nabokov exploits this tendency
> to the fullest extent, blurring the reality/art dichotomy by means of
> narrative deceit and often parodying the reader's relationship to the
> text. The implications of these techniques and of solipsistic reading
> are explored in this paper, and ultimately extended to encompass
> literary analysis in general, thereby examining how one should
> interact with a fictional piece of literature.
>
>

Offers!
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