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Cinematography in V. Nabokov’s novellas from The Return of Chorb [Vozvrashchenie Chorba] cycle

https://doi.org/10.31425/0042-8795-2023-4-26-39

Abstract

The image of a motion picture emerges in Nabokov’s early works collected under the title The Return of Chorb [Vozvrashchenie Chorba], years before his major ‘cinematographic’ novels. The article considers cinematography as a theme of three novellas in the collection and explores its functions. It argues that, as well as integrating the image of a film in his characteristic system of reflections and refractions, Nabokov employs it to create metatextual self-reflection: in Nabokov’s view, literature has cinematographic potential for conjuring up optical illusions and plunging the reader into a hallucination or a dream, and in doing so denies its own realistic or mimetic qualities. Just like a motion picture, Nabokov’s novellas are first and foremost interplays of colour and light and their movement — features that distinguish a cinematographic image from a photographic one. Nabokov also speaks of audial imagination as another common element between films (silent at that time) and literature: according to the novelist, a verbal image, silent and visual by nature, allows for the inaudible to be heard and challenges the veracity of the visible.

About the Author

D. V. Shulyatieva
National Research University Higher School of Economics
Russian Federation

Dina V. Shulyatieva - Candidate of Philology

20 Myasnitskaya St., Moscow, 101000



References

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Review

For citations:


Shulyatieva D.V. Cinematography in V. Nabokov’s novellas from The Return of Chorb [Vozvrashchenie Chorba] cycle. Voprosy literatury. 2023;(4):26-39. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.31425/0042-8795-2023-4-26-39

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ISSN 0042-8795 (Print)