Professor Amy Hungerford introduces the first of three lectures on Nabokov"s Lolita by surveying students" reactions to the novel, highlighting the conflicting emotions readers feel, enjoying Nabokov"s virtuosic style, but being repelled by the violence of his subject matter. Nabokov"s childhood in tsarist Russia provides some foundation for his interest in memory, imagination, and language. Finally, Professor Hungerford shows how Nabokov, through the voice of his protagonist Humbert, in his own voice in the epilogue, and in the voice of "John Ray, Jr." in the foreword, preempts moral judgments in a novel that celebrates the power of the imagination and the seductive thrill of language.
Complete course materials are available at
the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses
This course was recorded in Spring 2008.
이에이르대학, 오픈 컬리지
전후 미국 문학
제5회 「로리타」