This paper focuses upon intertextuality in Nabokov’s Lolita, but not through literary allusion. Instead, this study analyzes the way the author integrates non-literary material taken from post-World War 2 American mass culture into the textual fabric. Thanks to the preparatory notes to the novel kept at the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress, one can compare the way Nabokov weaves the non-literary elements into the fabric of his writing with his more traditional intertextual practice, so as to define the role of popular culture in his aesthetics
This article deals with the Russian translation of Lolita completed by Vladimir Nabokov in 1965, the...
This thesis examines the obscene, particularly through three taboo motifs present in John Irving’s T...
Nabokov writes in “On a book entitled Lolita” that the “initial shiver of inspiration” that triggere...
Lolita is well known as Nabokov\u2019s most \u201cAmerican\u201d novel, cementing his success as an ...
This paper focuses on Nabokov's American fiction as novels of the so-called “Long 1950s” and tries t...
This article addresses the relationship between text and paratext in the publication history of Vlad...
Postmodern literary fiction relies heavily on intertextual connections between works and genres. Vla...
Both famous and infamous Lolita remains the most important work of Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov. R...
The main focus of this paper is on the narrative strategy used by fan writers in the process of inte...
In this thesis I will demonstrate, that, far from being entirely removed from social or political id...
What happens when elements of the popular culture are incorporated into works of literature such as ...
This paper focuses on postmodern concepts of the narrator unreliability, intertextuality and humor. ...
The present study is an attempt to use “textually oriented discourse analysis” of Norman Fairclough,...
One of the most fascinating and controversial novels of the twentieth century, Vladimir Nabokov’s Lo...
This paper focuses on intertexts in Vladimir Nabokov’s literary works, with a main emphasis on Edgar...
This article deals with the Russian translation of Lolita completed by Vladimir Nabokov in 1965, the...
This thesis examines the obscene, particularly through three taboo motifs present in John Irving’s T...
Nabokov writes in “On a book entitled Lolita” that the “initial shiver of inspiration” that triggere...
Lolita is well known as Nabokov\u2019s most \u201cAmerican\u201d novel, cementing his success as an ...
This paper focuses on Nabokov's American fiction as novels of the so-called “Long 1950s” and tries t...
This article addresses the relationship between text and paratext in the publication history of Vlad...
Postmodern literary fiction relies heavily on intertextual connections between works and genres. Vla...
Both famous and infamous Lolita remains the most important work of Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov. R...
The main focus of this paper is on the narrative strategy used by fan writers in the process of inte...
In this thesis I will demonstrate, that, far from being entirely removed from social or political id...
What happens when elements of the popular culture are incorporated into works of literature such as ...
This paper focuses on postmodern concepts of the narrator unreliability, intertextuality and humor. ...
The present study is an attempt to use “textually oriented discourse analysis” of Norman Fairclough,...
One of the most fascinating and controversial novels of the twentieth century, Vladimir Nabokov’s Lo...
This paper focuses on intertexts in Vladimir Nabokov’s literary works, with a main emphasis on Edgar...
This article deals with the Russian translation of Lolita completed by Vladimir Nabokov in 1965, the...
This thesis examines the obscene, particularly through three taboo motifs present in John Irving’s T...
Nabokov writes in “On a book entitled Lolita” that the “initial shiver of inspiration” that triggere...