Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0009859, Tue, 8 Jun 2004 08:21:38 -0700

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Fw: Fw: Fw: The Kasbeam barber & Aubrey Beardsley
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----- Original Message -----
From: STADLEN@aol.com
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Sent: Tuesday, June 08, 2004 2:42 AM
Subject: Re: Fw: Fw: The Kasbeam barber & Aubrey Beardsley


I want to thank all those who answered my question. Both Rorty's and Nick's accounts deepen, and make explicit, what is plainly present in the sentence about the barber. They are in tune with what I take Nabokov to be about. I agree, too, with Leona Toker's correction of Rorty's "cruel" to "callous".

Anthony Stadlen



In a message dated 07/06/2004 17:00:28 GMT Standard Time, chtodel@cox.net writes:


----- Original Message ----- From: Stephen Blackwell.


A belated reply to this thread:
I've suggested in a paper that the Kasbeam Barber is also in part a reference to Aubrey Beardsley's poem "The Ballad of a Barber", which is about a middle-aged barber who rapes (figuratively murders) his client, a pubescent (or younger) princess. The paper is on line at http://www.nabokovmuseum.org/pdf/blackwell.pdf.

Cheers,
Steve Blackwell





Anthony Stadlen wrote:

Talking of which, can anyone explain the importance of this barber, and why he should have cost VN a month of work, as he claimed in 'On a Book Entitled "Lolita"'? There's an easel on the barber's desk with a picture of his dead son, just as there was one on the dentist Quilty's desk with a picture of his then live nephew the playwright. But ... ?



Although the Kasbeam barber occupies only one long sentence, I see that sentence as the reader’s experience of the novel in miniature: Humbert’s experience listening to the barber talk about his son without realising he is dead parallels the reader’s experience listening to Humbert talk about his 'daughter’ without realising she is dead. Of course, this assumes that it would take an astute reader indeed to keep John Ray’s seemingly throwaway comment that “Mrs. ‘Richard F.Schiller’ died in childbed, giving birth to a stillborn baby girl” (p.6) in mind until “Mrs. Richard F.Schiller” next appears at the bottom of her letter 250-odd pages later...

Nick.
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EDNOTE. I recall that philosopher Richard Rorty discusses the signifigcnce of LOLITA's Kasbeam barber. Rorty's approach is discussed in an essay by Leona Toker available on Zembla.

--
Stephen H. Blackwell
Associate Professor of Russian
Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures
701 McClung Tower
University of Tennessee
Knoxville, TN 37996
865/ 974-4536
fax: 974-7096
sblackwe@utk.edu



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