Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0024083, Sat, 27 Apr 2013 13:57:54 -0400

Subject
Re: BIRTHDATES and Irish writers
Date
Body

the feast day of st vladimir is in july but i doubt the secular nabokov celebrated it, vera of course was a secular jew, and made no bones about that. also father attended services, but didn't make kids go, mother didn't go but was a spiritual woman as per son, brother became a roman catholic. secular sums up vn


-----Original Message-----
From: Carolyn Kunin <chaiselongue@ATT.NET>
To: NABOKV-L <NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU>
Sent: Sat, Apr 27, 2013 12:30 pm
Subject: Re: [NABOKV-L] BIRTHDATES and Irish writers



Jansy reminds me that of course most Russians don't celebrate their birthday at all (Orthodox Russians I suppose one should add these days). Instead one celebrated on one's "name day", that is the birthday (I think) of the saint after which one was named.


Has anyone ever thought of considering name days in relation to the Russian characters in Nabokov novels? When would VN's own name day fall? Did his family follow the religious tradition or the secular? Interesting topic, Jansy!


Carolyn


p.s. At the moment I can't recall Pnin's first (Christian) name. Reminding me of that moment of great suspense in Oscar Wilde's play, when Aunt Augusta "cawn't recall what the General's christian name was" which of course was the whole point of the comedy, The Importance of Being Earnest.* Nor can I recall at the moment what our author's attitude toward the great Irish comics was -- I'm sure he was unaware of Somerville and Ross, but surely he had something to say of the famous resident of Reading Gaol ... (the other great Irish comic writer I was thinking of is of course the great GBS -- what anglophile isn't aware of him?)


*His name turned out to be, to everyone's delight except Aunt Augusta's, that the General had indeed been christened Earnest. But what his surname was, I'm sure I have no idea.



From: Jansy <jansy@AETERN.US>
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Sent: Sat, April 27, 2013 1:17:47 AM
Subject: Re: [NABOKV-L] BIRTHDATES: Pnin's Birthday



Sandy Drescher: Pnin's birthday is given as May 18th in The New Yorker, but becomes February 5th in the novel.

Jansy Mello quotes from PNIN

(a) "Pnin felt what he bad felt already on August 10, 1942, and February 15 (his birthday), 1937, and May 18, 1929, and July 4, 1920" ch2

(b) "Pnin's birthday for instance fell on February 3, by the Julian calendar into which he had been born in St Petersburg in 1898. He never celebrated it nowadays, partly because, after his departure from Russia, it sidled by in a Gregorian disguise (thirteen — no, twelve days late)..." ch3


Relating mentions to calendric variations, I began to wonder about Saint George's Day , also on April 23*, after reading a reference to it in ADA: "The modest narrator has to remind the rereader of all this, because in April (my favorite month), 1869 (by no means a mirabilic year), on St George’s Day (according to Mlle Larivière’s maudlin memoirs) Demon Veen married Aqua Veen — out of spite and pity, a not unusual blend."
(Ada's husband, A.Vinelander died on April 23, 1922 in Arizona.)

*According to wikipedia, "the feast day of Saint George [ ] is celebrated on 23 April, the traditionally accepted date of Saint George's death in AD 303. For Eastern Orthodox Churches which use the Julian calendar, 23 April corresponds to 6 May on the Gregorian calendar.
I also learnt that "One of the most popular references of a Russian name day is the entire first act of Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters, where Irina is celebrating her name day.Another literary depiction of a formal Russian name day ceremony occurs in Alexander Pushkin's "Eugene Onegin" where Tatiana's name day is celebrated. Name days are also mentioned in Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace, such as Book I, chapter 7 where both mother and youngest daughter of the Rostov family are celebrating the same name day of Natalya.
Note: although name day ("именины"/"imeniny") celebration is not as popular as birthday celebration, the Russian word for a birthday ("день рождения"/"djen' rozhdenia") person is still "именинник"/"imeninnik" (a person whose name day is being celebrated)."


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Contact the Editors

Visit "Nabokov Online Journal"

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View Nabokv-L Policies

Manage subscription options

Visit AdaOnline

View NSJ Ada Annotations

Temporary L-Soft Search the archive


All private editorial communications areread by both co-editors.


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