CALL FOR PAPERS

Conference: Northeast Modern Language Association (Rochester, NY; March 15 - 18, 2012)
Panel:  ‘Crossing the dark sky of exile’: Vladimir Nabokov and the Issue of Exile

In Speak, Memory, Vladimir Nabokov writes that "Sirin passed," "across the dark sky of exile" "like a meteor, and disappeared, leaving nothing much else behind him than a vague sense of uneasiness."  While most would disagree that Nabokov disappeared or left nothing much behind him, many would agree that exile played a large role in his life and works.  Even before he was forced to flee Russia, Nabokov's earliest poetry expressed the pain of exile and loss, a pain that would only intensify in the years to come.  After several years in Germany and France - during which time Nabokov continued to write in Russian despite becoming increasingly aware that he would probably never return to the land of his birth - Nabokov finally settled in America where he would find fame, fortune, and notoriety, a life very different from that described by Charles Kinbote in Pale Fire:  "a writer in exile, sans fame, sans future, sans audience, sans anything but his art."  Such a triumph never could have occurred if Nabokov had not left behind his Russian tongue for English, a move that Nabokov once referred to as his "private tragedy," a tragedy perhaps compounded when he later came to translate Lolita into Russian and found that he had lost his mastery of the language of his nation.  What role does exile play in Nabokov's works?  Why is it that this very important aspect of hiss works has been so overlooked by Nabokov’s critics?  Are Nabokov’s works confined or liberated by his exile and his fictional explorations of it?  Do these explorations link Nabokov’s works to other fictional explorations of exile?  In what ways do Nabokov’s works seek to transcend national boundaries and become works of world literature?  To what ends?  This panel should appeal to anyone with an interest in Nabokov, exile and transnational influences on world literature. Please submit 250-300 word abstracts (MSWord) by September 30 to Jackie Cameron at jackiec159@hotmail.com.

http://www.nemla.org/convention/2012/
Google Search the archive Contact the Editors Visit "Nabokov Online Journal" Visit Zembla View Nabokv-L Policies Manage subscription options Visit AdaOnline View NSJ Ada Annotations Temporary L-Soft Search the archive

All private editorial communications are read by both co-editors.