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The Two Vladimirs: Transculture in the Anti-Novels of Nabokov and Sorokin

The Two Vladimirs: Transculture in the Anti-Novels of
Nabokov and Sorokin
Date
Wed January 25th 2012, 5:15pm
Location
Pigott Hal, Room
216

Speaker(s): Marijeta Bozovic, Colgate University

The paper offers an unorthodox comparison between Vladimir Nabokov鈥檚 then-controversial parodic novel, Ada or Ardor (1969), and the far more combative anti-novels of Vladimir Sorokin, looking especially at Roman (1989) and Day of the Oprichnik (2006).

Nabokov鈥檚 English-language Ada seems the ideal locus for discussions of cultural flow: the planet Antiterra, Nabokov鈥檚 personal 鈥渨orld republic of letters,鈥 transplants and crossbreeds his beloved languages and literatures. By annexing what he feared was a vanishing Russian tradition to that of the English-language modernist novel, Nabokov aimed not only to enter, but to re-imagine a canon of Western masterpieces with Russian literature as a central rather than a marginalized strain.

As if in direct response to such a diasporic transcultural imaginary, Sorokin鈥檚 anti-novel Roman superimposes the Russian novel against itself. The tropes and patterns of the nineteenth and early twentieth-century Russian novel are re-worked to bring out the darkest undertones. Roman offers a nightmare vision of Russian culture as remote and inbred. In the much later Day of the Oprichnik, Sorokin returns to his local dystopia with a neo-medieval Rus鈥: this time, the country is even surrounded by a reified metaphor, a Great Wall of Russia preventing contact with other cultures.

Bozovic鈥檚 juxtaposition of the two Vladimirs is playful, but also attempts its own form of transcultural critical inquiry by leaping across the rift between Russian literature abroad (especially dramatic in the case of Nabokov), and that of late and post-Soviet culture.

 

MARIJETA BOZOVIC is an Assistant Professor in Russian and Eurasian Studies at Colgate University. She is currently working on a monograph based on her dissertation, 鈥淔rom Onegin to Ada: Nabokov鈥檚 Canon and the Texture of Time.鈥 Other recent publications include an article on Nabokov鈥檚 The Original of Laura, and the introduction to a volume on post-Yugoslav culture.