Introduction: Nabokov’s Morality Play, Michael Rodgers and Susan Elizabeth Sweeney.- Responsible Reading: “And So the Password Is—?”: Nabokov and the Ethics of Rereading, Tom Whalen.- Nabokov and Dostoevsky: Good Writer, Bad Reader?, Julian Connolly.- The Will to Disempower? Nabokov and His Readers, Michael Rodgers.- Good and Evil: Nabokov’s God; God’s Nabokov, Samuel Schuman.- By Trial and Terror, Gennady Barabtarlo.- The Aesthetics of Moral Contradiction in Some Early Nabokov Novels, David Rampton.- Agency and Altruism: Loving and Giving in Nabokov’s The Gift, Jacqueline Hamrit.- Kinbote’s Heroism, Laurence Piercy.- The Ethics of Representation: Whether Judgments, Sentences, and Executions Satisfy the Moral Sense in Nabokov, Susan Elizabeth Sweeney.- The Art of Morality, or on Lolita, Leland de la Durantaye.- “Obnoxious Preoccupation with Sex Organs”: The Ethics and Aesthetics of Representing Sex, Elspeth Jajdelska.- Modern Mimesis, Michael Wood.- Notes on Contributors.- Index
Michael Rodgers is a Teaching Assistant at the University of
Strathclyde, UK, where he completed his PhD dissertation on the
relationship between Vladimir Nabokov’s fiction and Friedrich
Nietzsche’s philosophy. He is currently researching the idea of
uncomfortable humor in twentieth-century literature.
Susan Elizabeth Sweeney is Professor of English at the College of
the Holy Cross, USA. The author of over thirty essays on Nabokov,
she was twice elected president of the International Vladimir
Nabokov Society and currently coedits NABOKV-L, the Vladimir
Nabokov Electronic Forum. She also publishes widely on American
literature, detective fiction, and narrative theory.
“A wide-ranging set of essays that both sharpen the focus and
broaden the field, to include issues of ethics, aesthetics and
metaphysics, as well as comparative studies that reveal the extent
of Nabokov’s engagement with formative developments in Russian and
European literature and thought.” (Barbara Wyllie, Slavonic and
East European Review SEER, Vol. 97 (2), April, 2019)
“Nabokov and the Question of Morality … assembles some of the best
recent thought on it. … The volume should be required reading for
any scholar seeking insight into the virtuoso … .” (Thomas Seifrid,
Slavic and East European Journal, Vol. 61 (3), 2017)
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