Friday, October 25, 2019
The Silver-tongued Rapist in Vladimir Nabokovs Lolita Essay -- Naboko
The Silver-tongued Rapist in Lolita     Ã     You can always count on a murderer for a fancy prose style. So says Humbert  Humbert at the start of Lolita in his account to the "Ladies and gentlemen of  the jury" (9). He refers to himself as a murderer (he is, after all, "guilty of  killing Quilty"), not as a rapist, the far more serious offense Lolita levels at  him. That I, and everyone else who reads the book, call Dolores Haze by the name  "Lolita" demonstrates the efficacy of Humbert's fancy prose style - under the  spell of his aesthetic mastery, we, the jury, must bend to his subjective vision  through memory, and thus we see the twelve-year-old nymphet as Lolita, as she is  in Humbert's arms. It is difficult to castigate Humbert when we see the world  through his European eyes.      Ã       Humbert's main strength is his sense of humor. Nabokov is sure to throw  Humbert's way all the American kitsch he can handle - mostly in the form of  Charlotte Haze. His sly insults sail over her head, but Humbert wins our  approval by making sure we understand them. Similarly, we admire him be...                      
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