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Conversation PieceNabokov believed that literature should not be made to serve as political propaganda, since in doing so it would become aesthetically damaged. He seems to forget that his own works which speak against tyranny and in favour of liberal humanism (Invitation to a Beheading, 'Tyrants Destroyed') are propaganda of a kind - but his belief is justified in the eyes of those who believe that these are amongst his weakest works.
The story begins with what looks like a return to the double theme. The narrator informs us that he has an exact namesake - 'complete from nickname to surname' (ND,p.125) - with whom he has sometimes been confused. But this strategy is used only as a plot device to get the narrator to a gathering in Boston to which he has been invited by mistake. There, a group of gullible and elderly American women are being addressed by a German professor, Dr Shoe. In his speech he seeks to reconcile America and Germany immediately after the end of the war by pouring suspicion onto Britain, claiming that Nazi atrocities are just allied propaganda lies, that German soldiers were clean, decent, and honourable, and that people should not be misled by 'the vivid Semitic imagination which controls the American press' (p.136). The narrator complains to the hostess about Dr Shoe and leaves in disgust, but then a week later he receives a letter from his namesake reproaching him for his bad behaviour at the meeting and ending with a demand for money. The problems here are that the story is little more than a synopsis of Dr Shoe's reactionary propaganda. None of the characters are developed, and there is almost no connection between the double device and what happens at the meeting - except to underscore the reactionary company the narrator's double keeps, which we already know at the beginning of the story. It is difficult to find a sympathetically portrayed German in the whole of Nabokov's fiction, and as Andrew Field points out in confronting this phenomenon 'Were it not for the events of this century, Nabokov's attitude towards things German might be regarded as whimsically as Dr Johnson's attitude towards Scotsmen' (LA,p.206). But the same might also be said about women - using Dr Johnson as a parallel in this case too. Some of his female characters are idealised love objects, but more often they are adulteresses (Martha in King Queen Knave) tormentors-of-men (Margot in Laughter in the Dark) or dim-witted vulgarians (Lydia in Despair). The problem for the humanist reader is that Nabokov covers his prejudices with very witty presentation:
It is fortunate for admirers of Nabokov's work that such overt misogyny is rare - and that such wit is ubiquitous. © Roy Johnson 2001
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