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Authors: Zadie Smith

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26
These were originally conceived as lectures for Nabokov’s Cornell undergraduates on the Masters of European Fiction. They were collected and published after his death.
27
Properly
poshlost
, from the Russian for vulgarity. Nabokov’s definition: “Not only the obviously trashy but mainly the falsely important, the falsely beautiful, the falsely clever, the falsely attractive.”
28
Nabokov nerds often slavishly parrot his strong opinions. I don’t think I’m the first person to have my mind poisoned, by Nabokov, against Dostoyevsky.
29
“In many ways writing is the act of saying
I,
of imposing oneself upon other people, of saying
listen to me, see it my way, change your mind
. It’s an aggressive, even a hostile act. You can disguise its aggressiveness all you want with veils of subordinate clauses and qualifiers and tentative subjunctives, with ellipses and evasions—with the whole manner of intimating rather than claiming, of alluding rather than stating—but there’s no getting around the fact that setting words on paper is the tactic of a secret bully, an invasion, an imposition of the writer’s sensibility on the reader’s most private space.”—Joan Didion
30
Vera, his wife and “first and best reader” being a close second.
31
Warning: this footnote for
Pnin
nerds only. Galya Diment’s illuminating study
Pniniad
reveals that Nabokov meant to kill Pnin, and was committed to this plan until quite far along in the novel. It appears to be a case of a writer becoming too charmed by his own creation to kill him. But it also means that the Tolstoy and Lermontov echoes (this sense of being spoken about casually, or caricatured, by other people, while you yourself are experiencing an extremely personal and ulterior reality) are deprived their final satisfaction (as Pnin’s escape from the jaws of death finds its own echo in the glass bowl that improbably survives the washing up). We can faintly imagine what the last chapter was to have been: the narrator and Jack Cockerell doing their sordid, lame little impressions of Pnin, while Pnin lies dying, or perhaps has already died. (Which leads to the question: what is it about having people speak of you as you lie dying that is particularly Russian?)
32
Of course an
actual
Van Eyck turns up at Pnin’s successful little party, when Laurence Clements, lost in thought while holding a dictionary, is compared to the master’s portrait of Canon van der Paele. At the same party, a little later on, bored Laurence is to be found “flipping through an album of
Flemish Masterpieces.

33
All appear in
Pnin
.
Bole
is used for “the trunk of a tree” but is also the small eye on a butterfly wing;
crepitation
is a Nabokov favorite, but aside from crackling generally, it’s the word for what a (bombardier) beetle does when he “ejects a pungent fluid with a sudden sharp report.”
Punchinello
, in
Pnin,
is of course the ugly Italian commedia character, who is short and stout, and so, in the simile under consideration, reminiscent of a tongue. But it is also a very pretty butterfly.
34
From
Pnin:
“He placed various objects in turn—an apple, a pencil, a chess pawn, a comb—behind a glass of water and peered through it at each studiously: the red apple became a clear-cut red band bounded by a straight horizon, half a glass of Red Sea, Arabia Felix. The short pencil, if held obliquely, curved like a stylized snake, but if held vertically became monstrously fat—almost pyramidal. The black pawn, if moved to and fro, divided into a couple of black ants. The comb, stood on end, resulted in the glass’s seeming to fill with beautifully striped liquid, a zebra cocktail.”
35
“My method of teaching precluded genuine contact with my students. At best, they regurgitated a few bits of my brain during examinations.”
36
Foucault, “What Is an Author?,” 1969. The English translation quoted is by Joseph V. Harari, first published in 1979.
37
“Ferrety, human-interest fiends, those jolly vulgarians,” as he called them. And that cagey afterword to
Lolita
performs a similar function.
38
Foucault, “What Is an Author?”
39
In Nabokov’s case, it’s more like S&M—an experience you’d hope Foucault could get behind.
40
A largely romantic concept. And wasn’t it always the same examples? Either it was Homer; some unspecified “ethnographic societies” within which “narrative is never assumed by a person but by a mediator, shaman or relator whose ‘performance’—the mastery of the narrative code—may possibly be admired but never his ‘genius’ ” (Barthes); or else the rather weak model of Beaumont and Fletcher.
41
Respectively, Walter Benjamin, Milena Jesenská, Erich Heller and Felice Bauer.
42
This has not been seriously assailed since Edmund Wilson’s “A Dissenting Opinion on Kafka.”
43
Begley tells us that Brod did not directly publish Kafka’s letters to Milena and Felice, but neither did he press them to “surrender his letters for destruction, or to destroy the letters themselves.” As a result, Brod lost control of them. As the German army entered Prague, Milena entrusted them to Willy Haas, who published them in 1952; Felice, who emigrated to America, sold her letters herself, in 1955, to Schocken Books.
44
Brod championed many artists, including Leoš Janáček, Franz Werfel and Karl Kraus.
45
The truly hagiographic text is Gustav Janouch’s
Conversations with Kafka.
The young Gustav befriended Kafka in Berlin in the final year of the writer’s life. In this essay, where I quote from the book, it is with the understanding that this is “reported speech” and most probably prettified for publication.
46
Conversations with Kafka
, Gustav Janouch.
47
Ibid.
48
Although, naturally, Larkin felt his own case to be by far the more extreme, as he makes clear in his poem “The Literary World”: My dear Kafka / When you’ve had five years of it, not five months, / Five years of an irresistible force meeting an / Immoveable object right in your belly, / Then you’ll know about depression.
49
“Self’s the Man” by Philip Larkin.
50
From Kafka’s diary. “She” is Felice.
51
Traditionally, critics credit Felice Bauer with being at least partial inspiration for “The Judgement”—the first story of his that satisfied Kafka. The evidence is circumstantial but convincing: it was dedicated to Felice, its composition dates to the beginning of their correspondence, and its heroine, to whom the hero is engaged, shares her initials: “Frieda Brandenfeld, a girl from a well-to-do family.”
52
Now more commonly used for recent immigrants to Western democracies.
53
Begley: “Three ‘ritual murder trials,’ throwbacks to the Middle Ages, and unimaginable for Jews believing that they lived in an era of moral as well as material progress, took place within his lifetime.”
54
From her introduction to Walter Benjamin’s
Illuminations: Essays and Reflections
. As Begley points out, Benjamin and Kafka were “near enough contemporaries for Arendt’s comments to be considered directly relevant” to Kafka’s case.
55
Sylvia Plath hinted at this: “I think I may well be a Jew.”
56
As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams he found himself transformed in his bed into a gigantic
Ungeziefer.
Variously translated as
insect, cockroach
—much to the horror of Nabokov, who insisted the thing had wings—
bug, dung-beetle,
the literal translation is
vermin.
Only the David Wyllie, Joachim Neugroschel and Stanley Corngold translations retain this literal meaning.
57
McCarthy is also the author of the novel
Men in Space
.
59
In another INS report, this line is described as “an active construct in which ‘nothing’ designates an event, perhaps even a momentous one.”
60
RAI is the Italian state broadcasting corporation.
61
Alessandro Blasetti (July 3, 1900-February 1, 1987) was the director of more than twenty films including
Quattro passi fra le nuvole
(1942) and L
a fortuna di essere donna
(1956).
62
The bikini-clad showgirls on Italian television.
63
Literally a recommendation of iron. A good word that will secure an applicant in a position.
64
Urban Italian mass housing, the equivalent of England’s housing estates and America’s projects.
65
From Larry McCaffery’s Dalkey Archive Press 1993 interview with Wallace, conducted during the composition of
Brief Interviews
. The great majority of Wallace quotes in this piece come from that interview.
66
Each year, the MacArthur Fellows Program gives out awards of several hundred thousand dollars (nicknamed genius grants) to individuals working in any field who “show exceptional merit and promise for continued and enhanced creative work.” Wallace received his in 1997.
Brief Interviews
was published in 1999.
67
Wallace’s most attentive mainstream critic, Wyatt Mason, made this point in his 2004 review “You Don’t Like It? You Don’t Have to Play.” There he asks and answers the question—“Why should [the reader] grant Wallace any of his demands . . . when the reader feels, not unreasonably, that Wallace is making unreasonable demands?”—with the only honest response available, that is, an account of Mason’s own pleasure: “having read the eight stories in
Oblivion;
having found some hard to read and, because they were hard and the hardness made me miss things, reread them; having reread them and seen how they work, how well they work, how tightly they withhold their working, hiding on high shelves the keys that unlock their treasures; having, in some measure, found those keys; and having, in the solitary place where one reads, found a bright array of sad and moving and funny and fascinating human objects of undeniable, unusual value.” But to those readers who find even Wallace’s habit of abbreviating the phrase
with regard to
(w/r/t) an unreasonable demand, no counterargument will suffice.
68
The second person present tense imperative—a fashionable conceit of the ’90s.
69
Maybe writers have this dream more than most.
70
I once asked Wallace, in a letter, for a list of favorite writers. Larkin was the only poet mentioned.
71
From “Dockery and Son.”
72
The end of “High Windows”: “The sun-comprehending glass,/And beyond it, the deep blue air, that shows/Nothing, and is nowhere, and is endless.” The end of “Water”: “And I should raise in the east/A glass of water/Where any-angled light/Would congregate endlessly.”
73
From “Dockery and Son.”
74
This, and later James quotes, are from the 1908 preface to
The Princess Casamassima.
This section of the preface has been used before, in the context of the connection between fiction and philosphy, by Martha Nussbaum in
Love’s Knowledge
.
75
Whom he called crank turners: “When you talk about Nabokov and Coover, you’re talking about real geniuses, the writers who weathered real shock and invented this stuff in contemporary fiction. But after the pioneers always come the crank turners, the little gray people who take the machines others have built and just turn the crank, and little pellets of metafiction come out the other end.”
76
We’ll come to the second.
77
OED:
abreaction;
Psychoanalysis
. The relief of anxiety by the expression and release of a previously repressed emotion, through reliving the experience that caused it; an instance of this.
78
And does not sit with Wallace’s respect and interest in AA, an organization he researched during the writing of
Infinite Jest
: “I went to a couple of meetings with these guys and thought that it was tremendously powerful. . . . For me there was a real repulsion at the beginning. “One Day at a Time,” right? . . . But apparently part of addiction is that you need the substance so bad that when they take it away from you, you want to die. . . . Something as banal and reductive as “one Day at a Time” enabled these people to walk through hell. . . . That struck me.”
That AA is by its nature a communal activity, however, which places therapeutic emphasis on a “buddy system,” is also worth noting.
79
An argument recently challenged by the American professor of linguistics Dan Everett, whose paper “Cultural Constraints on Grammar and Cognition in Pirahã,” caused an almighty brouhaha among the sort of people who get all brouhaha-ed about linguistics. In the paper he claimed to have found a tribe in the rainforest of northwestern Brazil—the Pirahã—whose language does not use recursion and is, in fact, finite.
The New Yorker
had an interesting article about all this, “The Interpreter,” in the April 16, 2007 issue.
80
From the
OED:
“Pica—A tendency or craving to eat substances other than normal food, occurring during childhood or pregnancy, or as a symptom of disease.” This is Wallace’s way of describing someone chewing her own fingernails.

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