The Reception of Crime and Punishment in the Works of Vladimir Nabokov

The article examines the presence of Fyodor Dostoevsky in the novels of Vladimir Nabokov. The points of intersection of the artistic world of the author of Lolita with Dostoevsky’s works are identified; the peculiarities of the reception of Crime and Punishment in the novels The Defense of Luzhin, I...

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Main Author: Elena V. Zaitseva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Russian Academy of Sciences. A.M. Gorky Institute of World Literature 2025-03-01
Series:Достоевский и мировая культура: Филологический журнал
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Online Access:https://dostmirkult.ru/images/2025-1/08_Zaitseva_244-265.pdf
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author Elena V. Zaitseva
author_facet Elena V. Zaitseva
author_sort Elena V. Zaitseva
collection DOAJ
description The article examines the presence of Fyodor Dostoevsky in the novels of Vladimir Nabokov. The points of intersection of the artistic world of the author of Lolita with Dostoevsky’s works are identified; the peculiarities of the reception of Crime and Punishment in the novels The Defense of Luzhin, Invitation to Execution, Despair are explored. The attitude of Vladimir Nabokov to the works of Fyodor Dostoevsky is ambiguous and requires careful and deep analysis. At the same time, one should rely not on the writer’s loud statements, given his love of hoaxes and penchant for shocking, but on his artistic creativity, in which one can catch echoes of his true attitude. In The Defense of Luzhin Nabokov’s artistic world “intersects” with the work of Fyodor Dostoevsky on three levels at least (the themes of the game, psychiatry as a source of poetics, and images of heroes). The novel can be considered polemical and parodic, but still “pro-Dostoevsky.” If we turn to the origins of the parody and consider that initially everything that was most sacred was parodied, then we can assume that the intertext is a manifestation of Nabokov’s hidden sympathy to the poetics of F.M. Dostoevsky. The novel Invitation to Execution, which is full of references to Dostoevsky, most clearly, according to researchers, illustrates the method of fantastic realism, the origins of which should be found in Dostoevsky, and the theme of crime and punishment in it is, as it were, inverted. “A grin from Dostoevsky” also appears in the novel Lolita. Parody mimicking, playing “in Dostoevsky” turn Lolita into a travesty-inverted Crime and Punishment. In the novel Despair Nabokov contrasts the gloomy thinker and “neurasthenic” Raskolnikov with the false thinker and “neurotic scoundrel” German Karlovich, who can be called a parodic-reduced transformation of Raskolnikov, his “vile mimicry.” Other characters in Crime and Punishment also undergo transformation. It is obvious that, despite the declared rejection, Nabokov was still captivated by the creative influence of his famous predecessor. The writer develops an extensive polemic with the classic in his work. The figure of Dostoevsky, images, themes and motifs of his works are manifested in different ways in Nabokov’s works: as characters, as parodies, as a riddle or a game with the reader.
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spelling doaj-art-ff2b92211d0046f6b51d0b41f27f123e2025-08-20T02:41:30ZengRussian Academy of Sciences. A.M. Gorky Institute of World LiteratureДостоевский и мировая культура: Филологический журнал2619-03112712-85122025-03-011 (29)24426510.22455/2619-0311-2025-1-244-265The Reception of Crime and Punishment in the Works of Vladimir NabokovElena V. Zaitseva0https://orcid.org/0009-0008-2584-7634Federal State Budgetary Educational Institution of Higher Education Lugansk State Pedagogical UniversityThe article examines the presence of Fyodor Dostoevsky in the novels of Vladimir Nabokov. The points of intersection of the artistic world of the author of Lolita with Dostoevsky’s works are identified; the peculiarities of the reception of Crime and Punishment in the novels The Defense of Luzhin, Invitation to Execution, Despair are explored. The attitude of Vladimir Nabokov to the works of Fyodor Dostoevsky is ambiguous and requires careful and deep analysis. At the same time, one should rely not on the writer’s loud statements, given his love of hoaxes and penchant for shocking, but on his artistic creativity, in which one can catch echoes of his true attitude. In The Defense of Luzhin Nabokov’s artistic world “intersects” with the work of Fyodor Dostoevsky on three levels at least (the themes of the game, psychiatry as a source of poetics, and images of heroes). The novel can be considered polemical and parodic, but still “pro-Dostoevsky.” If we turn to the origins of the parody and consider that initially everything that was most sacred was parodied, then we can assume that the intertext is a manifestation of Nabokov’s hidden sympathy to the poetics of F.M. Dostoevsky. The novel Invitation to Execution, which is full of references to Dostoevsky, most clearly, according to researchers, illustrates the method of fantastic realism, the origins of which should be found in Dostoevsky, and the theme of crime and punishment in it is, as it were, inverted. “A grin from Dostoevsky” also appears in the novel Lolita. Parody mimicking, playing “in Dostoevsky” turn Lolita into a travesty-inverted Crime and Punishment. In the novel Despair Nabokov contrasts the gloomy thinker and “neurasthenic” Raskolnikov with the false thinker and “neurotic scoundrel” German Karlovich, who can be called a parodic-reduced transformation of Raskolnikov, his “vile mimicry.” Other characters in Crime and Punishment also undergo transformation. It is obvious that, despite the declared rejection, Nabokov was still captivated by the creative influence of his famous predecessor. The writer develops an extensive polemic with the classic in his work. The figure of Dostoevsky, images, themes and motifs of his works are manifested in different ways in Nabokov’s works: as characters, as parodies, as a riddle or a game with the reader.https://dostmirkult.ru/images/2025-1/08_Zaitseva_244-265.pdfdostoevskynabokovanalysisplaycreativityaestheticscrime and punishment
spellingShingle Elena V. Zaitseva
The Reception of Crime and Punishment in the Works of Vladimir Nabokov
Достоевский и мировая культура: Филологический журнал
dostoevsky
nabokov
analysis
play
creativity
aesthetics
crime and punishment
title The Reception of Crime and Punishment in the Works of Vladimir Nabokov
title_full The Reception of Crime and Punishment in the Works of Vladimir Nabokov
title_fullStr The Reception of Crime and Punishment in the Works of Vladimir Nabokov
title_full_unstemmed The Reception of Crime and Punishment in the Works of Vladimir Nabokov
title_short The Reception of Crime and Punishment in the Works of Vladimir Nabokov
title_sort reception of crime and punishment in the works of vladimir nabokov
topic dostoevsky
nabokov
analysis
play
creativity
aesthetics
crime and punishment
url https://dostmirkult.ru/images/2025-1/08_Zaitseva_244-265.pdf
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