Since Matt's explanation of the Cinderella/incest tale I have been bedeviled with thoughts of incest. Now I do recall that Claudia Papka (now deceased) had a theory about Ada that made sense, and though I don't remember exactly her thesis (only an abstract was available when I found it). If I had to guess, I would say that she discovered that Ada could not be Van's real sister - in the through the looking glass world of anti-terra, one was only allowed to have intercourse with a natural sister. So it was Lucette and not Ada who was Van's biological sibling. Anti-terra incest, you see?
Carolyn

p.s. Mr Marcus, Rebekkah is no relation to Isaac. Jacob's servant chooses her as a mate for Isaac because of her generosity to him and others at the well, Beershevah, the seventh well. Not veil - well. Jacob does however send his servant back to his, Jacob's,  ancestral homeland to choose the bride, so only in that sense is she related to the family. I believe many arabs and non-arab muslims still do this to this day.


On Aug 7, 2012, at 10:12 AM, Jansy wrote:

Mike Marcus to Jansy:["Nabokov may have tried to mislead the reader into thinking about Roman mythology, instead of perceiving that the "Roman deity" is the Virgin Mary.In this way, should Bill Fraser and Percy de Prey be related to the Shakespeare controversies, Bill (Shakespeare?) would be seen as a Catholic and not a Protestant, by our author"] " 1. Bill Fraser was the actor who played a soldier in a 1960s tv show in the UK called 'The Army Game', so he'd fit in a similar role in Ada. But he transforms into Broken-Arm Bill, who as you intuited, means Shakespeare...(from http://www.sirbacon.org/overlap.htm). The "Roman deity" is the Catholic version of God. Shakespeare's religion is indeed a vexed subject. I personally enjoyed the 1848 book by W. J. Birch that has WS as an atheist". .
2."Certain identities fluctuate wildly in Ada, so Percy de Prey doesn't at all times represent Vere, though here he does, predominantly. The "daughter with pitcher" reminds me of the passage in Genesis 24, when Rebekah, with a pitcher on her shoulder, offers water to the parched Isaac, who is her second cousin and whom she marries (relatives marrying; Cordula is also Van's second cousin). Tartar as Turk? "Pitcher peri" must be the angel with the pitcher, whoever she is, no? Vere and Sidney were enemies, and Ardis is the Sidney arrowhead -- a "stab of Ardis"?"
3."In her January 2004 essay published in the MLR ('Nabokov's Ada and Sidney's Arcadia, The Regeneration of a Phoenix'), Penny McCarthy claimed that there were three reasons "why Nabokov might have seen himself as Sidney's double"... I can't see it. If he imagined himself as anyone's double, it would have been Hamlet".
 
Jansy Mello: I thought about the Virgin Mary, instead of a Roman Catholic God, because I understood that "Our Lady" was not similarly revered by Catholics and Protestants, serving to indicate affiliation to one or the other faiths. However, I didn't realize that the Anglican Church preserves the cult to the Virgin Mary much like the Roman Catholic believers.
Bill Fraser suggested to me "Phraser", such as he was described in the category of "story-teller" that adds new elements and "phrases" at every re-counting of a tale.  
 
It is fascinating how, when expressed, one perceives totally different perspectives in one's reading of a Nabokov work. Mike Marcus interpreted "a stab of Ardis" as an attack against Sidney's Arcady whereas, for me, "a stab of Ardis" means the pain resulting from a painful recollection of things past., not the prodding of an arrow directed towards something in the outside world. The "stab," in my perspective, leads to a mnemonic retake of an experience that mirrors present events (this is why I mentioned the paragraph's "holographic" quality (I'd just finished watching Arnold Schwartznegger on TV in the old "Total Recall".)
 .
While checking on "dangereux voisinage" I found another interesting reference to Shakespeare (cor-dula and cor-delia). Demon and Daniel Veen both have incestuous and pedophilic leanings. Actually, so does Van. Perhaps not only Hamlet, but also King Lear had a special significance to Nabokov? Would this lie behind his strong refusal of Oedipal theories?
What does "prof push" mean?
 
"...‘She’s a budding Duse,’ replied Demon austerely, ‘and the party is strictly a "prof push." You’ll stick to Cordula de Prey, I, to Cordelia O’Leary.’ ..."
(Cor-dula and Cor-delia) 
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All private editorial communications are read by both co-editors.