Thanks, Peter Dale, for extracting Nabokov's quotation from the article on Freud in the Italian newspaper. I can only blame my non-updated Adobe tools and my general incapacity with computers for not having done so.
 
Stephen Blackwell's careful note mentioned "VN's decades-long crusade against popularized Freudianism", and "popularized" is a term people often forget to consider while endorsing VN's opinions about Freud.  It appears to me that VN usually directed his invectives against what falls under the term "Applied Psychoanalysis", not to Psychoanalysis itself.
 
Whether Nabokov liked it or not he was more of a Freudian than the majority of present day psychoanalysts - since his works bear witness to the recognition of the constant interference of unconscious processes in daily life ( besides several other freudian ideas so engrained in our discourse that we no longer realize the breakthrough they represented when described for the first time.) 

Richard Rorty once wrote that Nabokov might have resented Freud because he wrote several of the "best lines" he, VN himself, would have liked to have writen before him. I don't think such an assertion can be sustained, but I remembered this quip because it suggests VN's grasp of an important part of Freud's theories.  

Jansy Mello        

Search the Nabokv-L archive at UCSB

Contact the Editors

All private editorial communications, without exception, are read by both co-editors.

Visit Zembla

View Nabokv-L Policies