Friday, December 20, 2019
Analysis Of Frankenstein And Nabokov s The Real Life Of...
Both Shelleyââ¬â¢s Frankenstein and Nabokovââ¬â¢s The Real Life of Sebastian Knight investigate problems of reality, strongly suggesting that real knowledge of someone cannot exist or is at best inaccessible. However, while Nabokov and Frankenstein suggest that one may never be able to know the ââ¬Å"real lifeâ⬠of another person, perhaps oneââ¬â¢s failed attempts to perfectly capture that realityââ¬âreflections or interpretations of reality, that isââ¬âfunction as the most meaningful ââ¬Å"realityâ⬠for the would-be knower. V.ââ¬â¢s definition of ââ¬Å"realâ⬠itself makes real knowledge an impossibility. While V. never explicitly defines ââ¬Å"real,â⬠readers can piece together an approximate understanding from the metaphors he uses to express his lack of access to the real Sebastian. Although V. ââ¬Å"could describe the way he [Sebastian Knight] walked, or laughed, or sneezed,â⬠these facts ââ¬Å"would be no more than sundry bits o f cinema-film cut away by scissors and having nothing in common with the essential dramaâ⬠(Larsen 16). Characters know much about Sebastian but ââ¬Å"he himself escapes [them]â⬠(Larsen 28-9). Itââ¬â¢s this ââ¬Å"essential dramaâ⬠or ââ¬Å"he himselfâ⬠that V. identifies as realââ¬âthe core essence of someone or something. And after a conversation with Sebastian, V. longed ââ¬Å"for no earthly reason (...) to say something real, something with wings and a heart,â⬠suggesting that something real is otherworldly, incorporeal (ââ¬Å"no earthly reasonâ⬠, ââ¬Å"wings and a heartâ⬠), and thus beyond V.ââ¬â¢s ability to know. Perhaps what Nabokov terms
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