This paper focuses on Nabokov's American fiction as novels of the so-called “Long 1950s” and tries to divert traditional debate of Nabokov’s work from its canon of post-modern reception, as centering on language play and upended narrative codes. By focusing on the ever present subtext of Cold War culture in Nabokov’s narratives, this research tries to identify the complex elaboration of “subversive sexuality” in Nabokov’s key novels of the Long 1950s, Lolita and Pale Fire, his most successful and most widely commented works
Vladimir Nabokov’s novels seem to hold, for many, a strange fascination. This essay began as an inqu...
This paper aims to highlight the importance of V. Nabokov’s ouvre in shaping some aspects of selecte...
Through examining Humbert Humbert’s psychological defense mechanisms in Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita, t...
This paper focuses on Nabokov's American fiction as novels of the so-called “Long 1950s” and tries t...
Lolita is well known as Nabokov\u2019s most \u201cAmerican\u201d novel, cementing his success as an ...
This dissertation addresses questions on the nature of reading stories, experiencing narratives and ...
This paper focuses upon intertextuality in Nabokov’s Lolita, but not through literary allusion. Inst...
This paper aims to highlight the importance of V. Nabokov’s ouvre in shaping some aspects of selecte...
This thesis examines the obscene, particularly through three taboo motifs present in John Irving’s T...
This thesis investigates how Vladimir Nabokov\u27s experience as an exiled writer in America serves ...
This thesis investigates the relationship between the operation of time in the fiction of Vladimir N...
In this thesis, I theorise and criticise the sexual and textual politics of Nabokov's Ada and Lolita...
Since Vladimir Nabokov’s 1955 publication of Lolita, numerous feminist scholars have argued for rere...
International audienceDeconstructing the Soviet Ideology of the “New Man”: Exile and Memory in Vladi...
Thesis Abstract Vladimir Nabokov is usually regarded as one of the most important authors of postmod...
Vladimir Nabokov’s novels seem to hold, for many, a strange fascination. This essay began as an inqu...
This paper aims to highlight the importance of V. Nabokov’s ouvre in shaping some aspects of selecte...
Through examining Humbert Humbert’s psychological defense mechanisms in Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita, t...
This paper focuses on Nabokov's American fiction as novels of the so-called “Long 1950s” and tries t...
Lolita is well known as Nabokov\u2019s most \u201cAmerican\u201d novel, cementing his success as an ...
This dissertation addresses questions on the nature of reading stories, experiencing narratives and ...
This paper focuses upon intertextuality in Nabokov’s Lolita, but not through literary allusion. Inst...
This paper aims to highlight the importance of V. Nabokov’s ouvre in shaping some aspects of selecte...
This thesis examines the obscene, particularly through three taboo motifs present in John Irving’s T...
This thesis investigates how Vladimir Nabokov\u27s experience as an exiled writer in America serves ...
This thesis investigates the relationship between the operation of time in the fiction of Vladimir N...
In this thesis, I theorise and criticise the sexual and textual politics of Nabokov's Ada and Lolita...
Since Vladimir Nabokov’s 1955 publication of Lolita, numerous feminist scholars have argued for rere...
International audienceDeconstructing the Soviet Ideology of the “New Man”: Exile and Memory in Vladi...
Thesis Abstract Vladimir Nabokov is usually regarded as one of the most important authors of postmod...
Vladimir Nabokov’s novels seem to hold, for many, a strange fascination. This essay began as an inqu...
This paper aims to highlight the importance of V. Nabokov’s ouvre in shaping some aspects of selecte...
Through examining Humbert Humbert’s psychological defense mechanisms in Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita, t...