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Authors: Robert Roper

Nabokov in America (63 page)

BOOK: Nabokov in America
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works by,
(1)

Brecht, Bertold,
(1)
,
(2)
n

Breit, Harvey,
(1)

Bright Angel Lodge, Grand Canyon National Park,
(1)

Brockway, Wallace,
(1)

Buckley, William F.,
(1)

Bunin, Ivan,
(1)
,
(2)

Burroughs, William,
(1)

butterflies, Nabokov’s study of.
See also
American Museum of Natural History; Museum of Comparative Zoology (Harvard)

achievements in,
(1)

appeal of,
(1)

appetite for detail and,
(1)

area of specialization in,
(1)

as boy in Russia,
(1)
,
(2)

and comfort of familiar English scientific jargon,
(1)
,
(2)

decline of in late 1940s,
(1)

as dream career,
(1)
,
(2)

friends and colleagues in,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)
,
(6)
,
(7)
n

Nabokov’s publications on,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)
,
(6)

during success of
Lolita
,
(1)
,
(2)

transition from gentleman naturalist to scientist,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)

butterfly collecting by Nabokov

affinity with American literature and,
(1)

as boy in Russia,
(1)
,
(2)

in Colorado,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

desire to discover new species,
(1)

in Europe,
(1)

familiarity with U.S. collection sites,
(1)

in France,
(1)

and interest in America,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)

in Kansas,
(1)

during lecture tours (1942),
(1)

and mountains, benefits of,
(1)

during New York–California drive (1941),
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

pleasures of,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)

Speak, Memory
on,
(1)
,
(2)

at Stanford,
(1)

in Utah,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)
,
(6)

in Vermont,
(1)

Western travel and,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
n

in Wyoming,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

in Yosemite National Park,
(1)

“Butterfly Collecting in Wyoming” (Nabokov),
(1)

Buxbaum, Richard,
(1)

Byron, Lord,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
n

Call It Sleep (Roth),
(1)
n

Cambridge, Massachusetts.
See also
Harvard University; Museum of Comparative Zoology (Harvard)

Dmitri’s education in,
(1)

Nabokovs’ homes in,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

Nabokovs’ social life in,
(1)

Camera Obscura
(Nabokov),
(1)
.
See also
Laughter in the Dark
(Nabokov)

captivity narratives in American literature,
(1)
,
(2)

Caswell, Francis,
(1)

caves, as U.S. roadside attractions,
(1)

SS
Champlain
(ship),
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
n

character of Nabokov

arrogance,
(1)
,
(2)

boyishness,
(1)

business matters, lack of interest in,
(1)n

cruelty,
(1)
,
(2)

egoism,
(1)

enjoyment in famous people,
(1)

force of will,
(1)

friendships with ordinary people,
(1)

generosity,
(1)

remoteness,
(1)
,
(2)
n

running down of other writers,
(1)n
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
n

self-confidence,
(1)
,
(2)

sententiousness,
(1)

superciliousness and condescension,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)

Chauteaubriand,
(1)

Chernyshevsky, Nikolai,
(1)

“Cloud, Castle, Lake” (Nabokov),
(1)

Cocteau, Jean,
(1)

Colorado, Nabokovs in

in 1947,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)

in 1951,
(1)

and
Lolita
, writing of,
(1)
,
(2)

and pleasure in isolation,
(1)

sense of déjà vu in,
(1)

colors,

Nabokov as synesthete and,
(1)

Russian speakers more discerning of blue,
(1)

Colter, Mary E. J.,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)

Columbine Lodge, Colorado,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)

compulsion

and butterfly collecting,
(1)

as theme in Nabokov,
(1)n
,
(2)

Comstock, William P.,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)

Conclusive Evidence
(Nabokov).
See
Speak, Memory
(Nabokov)

Constant, Benjamin,
(1)

Cooper, James Fenimore,
(1)
,
(2)

Cornell University, Nabokov at

Dmitri Nabokov and,
(1)

duration of,
(1)

as financial relief,
(1)
,
(2)

friends and colleagues,
(1)
,
(2)
n

hiring of,
(1)

last class taught,
(1)

leaves of absence from,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
n

literary production during,
(1)
,
(2)

Nabokovs’ happiness at,
(1)

Nabokovs’ homes in,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)

and
Pale Fire
, setting of,
(1)

role in community,
(1)

salary,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
n

search for other positions,
(1)

and student unrest,
(1)

teaching duties,
(1)

Covici, Pascal,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

critical literature on Nabokov,
(1)

Dale, Edith Hamlin,
(1)

Dead Souls
(Gogol), Nabokov’s translation of,
(1)
,
(2)

Decision
(periodical),
(1)

The Defense
(Nabokov),
(1)
,
(2)

Dennis, Nigel,
(1)

Despair
(Nabokov),
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)

detail, Nabokov’s appetite for,
(1)
,
(2)

and
Eugene Onegin
,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
n176–77

and
Lolita
,
(1)
,
(2)

and reality, mystery underlying,
(1)

writing style and,
(1)

Dickinson, Emily,
(1)

Disappointment Peak, Wyoming,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
n

Dixon, Maynard,
(1)
,
(2)

Dobuzhinsky, Mstislav,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)

Doctor Zhivago
(Pasternak),
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)
,
(6)
,
(7)
n

Dostoevsky, Fyodor,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

Downey, John,
(1)
,
(2)

dreams, Nabokov’s records of,
(1)

driving tour, New York to California (1941),
(1)
,
(2)

accommodations,
(1)
,
(2)

butterfly collecting and,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

daily routine of,
(1)

Dmitri Nabokov and,
(1)
,
(2)

Dorothy Leuthold and,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)
,
(6)

itinerary for,
(1)

road conditions and,
(1)

sites visited,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

tacky U.S. landscape and,
(1)

vehicle for,
(1)

driving tour of New York (1948),
(1)

driving tours of Western U.S.,
(1)
,
(2)

in 1949,
(1)
,
(2)
n

in 1951

butterfly collecting during,
(1)

and research for
Lolita
,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)
,
(6)
,
(7)
n

in 1952,
(1)

in 1953,
(1)

in 1954,
(1)

in 1956,
(1)

in 1958,
(1)
,
(2)

in 1959,
(1)
,
(2)

in 1972, hoped-for final trip,
(1)

author’s retracing of,
(1)

happiness of Nabokov family during,
(1)

Nabokov’s affinity for,
(1)

as postwar American pastime,
(1)

Véra’s documentation of,
(1)

Dr. Strangelove
(film),
(1)

Du Bois, W. E. B.,
(1)
,
(2)
n,
(3)
n

Dunne, J. W.,
(1)
,
(2)

Dupee, F. W.,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
n

Eastman, Max,
(1)

economic concerns of Nabokov in America,
(1)
,
(2)

in Cambridge,
(1)

Cornell teaching job and,
(1)
,
(2)

cost of Dmitri’s education and,
(1)

cost of Western trips and,
(1)

Nabokov’s complaints about,
(1)

relief from, after 1946,
(1)

triumph over, as inspirational,
(1)

economic concerns of Nabokov in Europe,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)

efforts to downplay,
(1)

lost inheritance and,
(1)

Edel, Leon,
(1)

education of Nabokov

at Cambridge University,
(1)

depth of,
(1)

and relocation to U.S.,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)

Eliot, T. S.,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)
,
(5)
,
(6)
n

Ellis, Charles,
(1)

Ellis, Havelock,
(1)

Emerson, Ralph Waldo,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

employment, during first months in U.S.,
(1)

The Enchanter
(Nabokov)

dialogue in,
(1)

as failed work,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

generic description in,
(1)

history of,
(1)
,
(2)
n

parallels to
Lolita
in,
(1)
,
(2)
n

sexual predation of girls as theme in,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

England, Nabokov’s efforts to move to,
(1)

English language

Nabokov’s spoken English,
(1)

Nabokov’s transition to

and comfort of scientific jargon,
(1)
,
(2)

and
Lolita
, slang in,
(1)
,
(2)

mastery, achievement of,
(1)
,
(2)

move to America and,
(1)

Nabokov on,
(1)

as obstacle to literary work,
(1)

English language authors, World War II-era antisemitism of,
(1)

Epstein, Jason,
(1)
,
(2)

Eugene Onegin
(Pushkin)

and character as construction from literary sources,
(1)
,
(2)

echoes of in
Lolita
,
(1)

epigraph of,
(1)

influence on Nabokov,
(1)
,
(2)

Onegin’s “weary negligence,”
(1)

plot of,
(1)

publication of,
(1)
,
(2)

Tatiana’s obsessive love in,
(1)

Eugene Onegin
(Pushkin), Nabokov’s translation and commentary,
(1)
,
(2)
,
(3)
,
(4)

funding of,
(1)

BOOK: Nabokov in America
10.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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