Verified Document

Nabokov's Pnin When One Mentions Essay

What is interesting is that Wind appears to believe that he is acting in an ethical manner by informing Pnin of their plot, rather than surprising him with it when they reach America. Wind also seems to think that he is being generous and ethical by offering to pay for half of Liza's ticket to America, though why he would only offer to repay Pnin for half of the passage is an ethical question no reader could answer. He intends to take Pnin's entire wife when they reach America, and she is pregnant with Wind's child. Why offer to pay any part of Liza's passage, if Wind is not willing to pay her entire passage. Liza's interactions with Pnin continue to be bizarre and unethical. She cheats on her husband Eric with a lover named George. Eric is aware of the affair and is willing to forgive the affair, but Liza feels that Eric has never been able to bond with their child. Therefore, she asks Pnin to set aside money for the child and send it to him. She does this with every expectation that he will comply, though the child was never his, he has no relationship with the child, and he has no obligation to the child. However, Pnin reveals himself as a very good person, clearly aware that this child will not find stability in Liza or Wind. He does send the boy money and involves himself in the child's life. The pair...

That relationship reminds the reader that sometimes the greatest gifts in life come from exceeding one's ethical and moral obligations.
Though the novel describes a series of slights and cruelties directed at Pnin, it is actually Pnin who manages to triumph over the narrator. As described above, the narrator thinks that it is unethical for a story to have a happy ending, when the circumstances of the story suggest otherwise. Towards the end of the novel, Pnin has a ruined marriage, a strained relationship with his son, and has just been informed that he is going to lose his job. There is no way to anticipate a happy ending for Pnin. However, the novel actually has a very happy ending. Pnin manages to actually escape from the novel and evade whatever unhappy ending the narrator has in store for him. The end of the novel literally has the narrator pursuing Pnin, but unable to capture him. Fans of Nabokov's work realize that Pnin may have escaped into a happy ending; he turns up in Pale Fire, another of Nabokov's novels, working at a better college and presumably happy.

References

Nabokov, 1955V. (1955). Pnin. New York: Alfred a. Knopf.

Sources used in this document:
References

Nabokov, 1955V. (1955). Pnin. New York: Alfred a. Knopf.
Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Related Documents

Lolita an Analysis of the Repulsive in
Words: 1375 Length: 4 Document Type: Essay

Lolita An Analysis of the Repulsive in Nabokov's Lolita This paper will show why Vladimir Nabokov chose to illustrate a theme that is considered by many to be repulsive: it was a theme through which he could hold the mirror up to society and reflect what he saw happening in the world around him. When Nabokov's Lolita debuted first in Paris and then in America in the 1950s, it provoked one of

Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
Words: 1671 Length: 5 Document Type: Essay

Lolita in Light of Sontag's "Morality" My experience reading Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita was a pleasant one, an aesthetic experience that, as Susan Sontag states, appealed to my consciousness. Sontag suggests that art is better understood as something that "enliven[s] our sensibility and consciousness" rather than as a blanket statement of moral code. In other words, genuine works of art operate within the aesthetic sphere of experience and do not aim

Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov. Specifically
Words: 1013 Length: 3 Document Type: Term Paper

It is very clear that he can be much more dark and scheming than he seems to be. That is illustrated by just how far he will go to possess Lolita - marrying her mother and then literally abducting her after her mother dies. In addition, they both are tragic figures who never get what they really want. Humbert discovers he is capable of love, and that he loves Lolita,

Humbert in Lolita, Vladimir Nabokov Creates the
Words: 3606 Length: 12 Document Type: Thesis

Humbert In Lolita, Vladimir Nabokov creates the character of a clear anti-hero in Humbert, a man who has is guilty of pedophilia, possibly rape and murder. The bulk of the book, however, is devoted to Humbert's narration of his affair with his stepdaughter, a "nymphet" named Dolores Haze or, in Humbert's mind, Lolita. For Humbert, the various forms of love he feels for the young girl are inextricably linked with his

Female Lolita Nabokov's Famous Novel, Lolita, Would
Words: 966 Length: 3 Document Type: Term Paper

Female Lolita Nabokov's famous novel, Lolita, would have some important and essential differences had it been written by a woman. A female writer would have created a more complex and sympathetic characterization for Lolita, expanding on Nabokov's treatment of Lolita as simply a vulgar personification of the qualities of the nymphet. The impact of Humbert's obsession with Lolita and their sexual affair would have been explored more thoroughly by a female

Nabokov's "Lolita" Vladimir Nabokov's "Lolita" Is Perhaps
Words: 1987 Length: 7 Document Type: Term Paper

Nabokov's "Lolita" Vladimir Nabokov's "Lolita" is perhaps one of the most famous novels of the Twentieth Century. For not only did Nabokov dare to explore the forbidden subject of an older man's obsessive love and lustful desire for a young girl, he did so with sheer poetry and language mastery. Joyce Carol Oates once said that "Lolita is one of our finest American novels, a triumph of style and vision" (Oates Pp).

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.

Get Started Now