pontalba
Well-Known Member
Yes. I do. Be afraid. Be very afraid.StillILearn said:Uh-oh. Stand back, folks. pontalba's got a photobucket and she knows how to use it!
Now where on earth did you find that bucket!!?? LOL
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Yes. I do. Be afraid. Be very afraid.StillILearn said:Uh-oh. Stand back, folks. pontalba's got a photobucket and she knows how to use it!
Hi SIL,StillILearn said:Peder, I just know you have electricity. You have made mention of having to wait for daylight to do something or other before this. Now I'm curious.
Maybe you just mean that it's just late and you're tired? Well, nighty night. CU in the AM 2.
Shade, (It's hard to resist calling you John),Shade said:"Now a masterwork, the novel that inspired Nabokov's Lolita." Which makes me think two things: 1. No it didn't (see above). 2. "Now a masterwork"? You mean it wasn't before? How does that happen??
If that isn't enough to puke a buzzard, I don't know what would qualify.Shade said:"Now a masterwork, the novel that inspired Nabokov's Lolita."
Please don't make me search through 150 pages of posts to find the exact author and statement you are referring to here, Peder. It was very interesting, and we had a lengthy discussion on the actual terms the author used, but I can't recall either.Peder said:I'm inclined more to believe that one is seeing the fact that there are only a certain number of set pieces to organize a story around, and one of them is a road trip. Think of Don Quixote for example, but I don't see any suggestion that Highsmith stole her idea from Cervantes. Going further there is the idea that there is only one story at the root of all stories, the story of how a person meets the challenges of life and copes with them, if I paraphrase that correctly.
Lately I've been reading Nabokov's version of a detective story -- The Real Life of Sebastian Knight. Guess what! The detective goes through the story interviewing one potential witness after another until he can finally solve the mystery. Sound familiar? Name any half dozen authors!
Yes, do join in, Doug.But I'm very glad you keep us in mind. We find Nabokov fascinating and all is definitely grist for the mill here. And come to think of it, it has been a long while since SFG has injected one of his mind-bending posts into the discussion. Are you perhaps thinkiing of joining us?. I am sure we all hope so and would find that very enjoyable. Come on over.
How very well put, Peder.Among other reasons, Nabokov is fun to read and talk about, and we still have a long way to go.
Avatars with either blue or green.....or blue/green and trees.
"Inspired Nabokov's Lolita"?! There's an aaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrrggggggggggghhhhhhhhh for you!
ROTFALOL!! Fish Porn! Oy!Gem said:Yay! I fit in with the colour scheme. Speaking of Avatars, Steffee; I was lurking around here yesterday and my 9 year old nephew came in and spotted your avatar (the family is over for the long weekend). He now refuses to drink water. He stopped my sister form drinking some last night, and when she asked why, he replied "cos gemmies computer says fish have the sex in it". So everyone now thinks i spend my time online looking at fish porn
I see i'm going to have to tread carefully around here, Pontalba has a mean aim with that stick
So everyone now thinks i spend my time online looking at fish porn
It was in "How to Read Literature Like a Professor," and I'll find it in a minute.pontalba said:Oh, Steffee wasn't the "One Story" bit brought out in "Everything Nabokov"? I tried searching, with too much luck.
I'll look around here.
Really? Jeez, I'm sorry Gem.Gem said:Speaking of Avatars, Steffee; I was lurking around here yesterday and my 9 year old nephew came in and spotted your avatar (the family is over for the long weekend). He now refuses to drink water. He stopped my sister form drinking some last night, and when she asked why, he replied "cos gemmies computer says fish have the sex in it". So everyone now thinks i spend my time online looking at fish porn
Still said:I'm kind of taken with the notion that at any given moment the person you are sitting next to may very well be thinking about Nabokov.
"What a nice company picnic this is. Hey, would you mind passing me that salt shaker over there? Oh. Sorry for startling you. Ah, I see that you have a sort of a faraway look in your eyes. Um, you weren't thinking about Nabokov, by any chance, were you?"
Thank you, Peder.It was in "How to Read Literature Like a Professor," and I'll find it in a minute.
So rest a bit,
Peder
"..But there's a greater truth, at least as I see it, beyond all these interpretive activities, a truth that informs and drives the creation of novels and plays and stories and poems and essays and memoirs even when (as is usually the case) writers aren't aware of it. I've mentioned it before and have employed it throughout, so it's no very great secret. Moreover, it's not my personal invention or discovery, so I'm not looking for credit here, but it needs saying again, so here it is: there's only one story.
...
What's it about?
That's probably the best question you'll ever ask, and I apologize for responding with a really lame answer: I don't know. It's not about anything. It's about everything.....It's about everything that anyone wants to write about. I suppose that what the one story, the ur-story, is about is ourselves, about what it means to be human. I mean what else is there?....Mostly though we are interested in ourselves in space or time, in the world. so what our poets and story tellers do for us -- drag a rock up to the fire, have a seat, listen to this one -- is explain us-and-the-world, or us-in-the-world.
On one level everyone who writes anything knows that pure originality is impossible....What I am talking about here involves a couple of concepts we need to consider.
The first ... is intertextuality... a most useful notion that comes to us from the great Russian formalist critic Mikhail Bakhtin, who limits it pretty much to fiction, but I think I'll follow the example of T. S. Eliot, who, being a poet, saw that it operates throughout the realms of literature. The basic premise of intertextuality is really pretty simple: everything 's connected. In other words anything you write is connected to other written things.....[every writer's] work interacts with other works. And those works with others. The result is a sort of World Wide Web of writing. Your novel may contain echoes or refutations of novels or poems you've never read.
The second is archetype...the mythic original on which a pattern is based. Somewhere back in myth, something, a story component let's call it -- comes into being. It works so well that it catches on, hangs around, and keeps popping up in subsequent stories. That component could be anything: a quest, a form of sacrifice, flight, a plunge into water, whatever resonates and catches our imaginations, setting off vibrations deep in our collective unconscious, calling to us, alarming us, inspiring us to dream or nightmare, making us want to hear it again.. And again and again and again. When we hear or see or read one of these instances of archetype, we feel a little frisson of recognition and utter a little "aha!" And we get that chance with fair frequency, because writers keep employing them....
Those stories -- myth, archetype, religious narrative, the great body of literature -- are always in us. Always with us. We can draw upon them, tap into them, add to them whenever we want....That one story that has been going on forever is all around us.
You are very welcome. It loses clarity somewhat in the excision, but OTOH it does put me on the trail of Bakhtin.StillILearn said:Thank you, Peder.
Company Picnic? You would not find me at one of those for sure. The idea fairly reeks of bugs in food, ants crawling all over....everything..ewww. No, I'm not really an outdoor person. Now I do on occasion, enjoy sitting outside and reading. I'm afraid thats the extend of outdoorsmanship for me.StillILearn said:I'm kind of taken with the notion that at any given moment the person you are sitting next to may very well be thinking about Nabokov.
"What a nice company picnic this is. Hey, would you mind passing me that salt shaker over there? Oh. Sorry for startling you. Ah, I see that you have a sort of a faraway look in your eyes. Um, you weren't thinking about Nabokov, by any chance, were you?"