Vladimir Nabokov's LolitaHarold Bloom Chelsea House, 1987 - 131 strani A collection of six critical essays on Faulkner's Light in August, arranged in chronological order of their original publication. |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–3 od 9
Stran 32
... perfect beauty and win for himself " aesthetic bliss . " This is the moral structure of Lolita , and it surely is strong enough to support and contain the anti - moral material the novel allows itself . A novel is not pornographic ...
... perfect beauty and win for himself " aesthetic bliss . " This is the moral structure of Lolita , and it surely is strong enough to support and contain the anti - moral material the novel allows itself . A novel is not pornographic ...
Stran 33
... perfect reading , seeing it in perfect sympathy with the author's intentions , understanding it from inside ; however rare , in cultural fact , such a reading may be ; however little that reading may coincide with the book's effective ...
... perfect reading , seeing it in perfect sympathy with the author's intentions , understanding it from inside ; however rare , in cultural fact , such a reading may be ; however little that reading may coincide with the book's effective ...
Stran 60
... perfect imitation of absolutely topnotch tennis , " without any interest in the actual goal of the game . She has ac- quired the flattened , two - dimensional quality of an abused theme , and Humbert , in retrospect , sees that " had ...
... perfect imitation of absolutely topnotch tennis , " without any interest in the actual goal of the game . She has ac- quired the flattened , two - dimensional quality of an abused theme , and Humbert , in retrospect , sees that " had ...
Vsebina
Vladimir Nabokovs Lolita | 5 |
The Morality of Lolita | 13 |
The Springboard of Parody | 35 |
Avtorske pravice | |
6 preostalih delov ni prikazanih
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
actually aesthetic American appears artistic attempt beauty becomes begins bliss calls characters Charlotte clearly comic completely conventional created creation criticism death described desire direct double effect emotional example exist experience express fact feelings fiction figure final force gives hand hero human Humbert idea ideal imagination important interest kill kind language later less literary literature Lolita look lover marriage matter means mind moral Nabokov narrative narrator nature never novel nymphet object once originality parody passage passion past perfect perhaps play possible problem Quilty Quilty's reader reading reality reference relation relationship represented response rhetorical romantic says scene seems sense sexual simply Speak story style suggest symbolic tells tenderness theme things tion Tolstoy tone tradition trying turn understanding University voice whole writing