A Portrait of the Artist as a Dying Man: Vladimir Nabokov and the Scandal of Posthumous Publication
Straub, Stephanie Marie
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2014-07-15
Abstract
In 2009, the text that would have been Vladimir Nabokov’s final novel, The Original of Laura, was published against the late author’s explicit instructions. Although the controversy surrounding Laura’s publication ostensibly stemmed from this violation of Nabokov’s wishes, objections to the novel’s publication (as voiced in a host of negative reviews) chiefly hinged on the text’s supposed aesthetic shortcomings. In this paper, I offer a reading of both the text itself and the publication controversy in terms of the implied image of the author. Crucially, Laura was not published as a simple transcription of Nabokov’s existing draft, but as a mass-produced manuscript, a series of facsimiles of the original draft, as written in the author’s own hand. I read the manuscript, first, as photographically reproduced traces of the dead, then as an implied portrait of the author. I argue that Laura actively uses the reader’s desire for the late author to construct an image of the dead, but that this portrait also always problematically effaces the existing image of the author.