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Ada Arcana Books Fiction Lit Crit Nabokov

Some Eccentric Readings of Ada

“I loath Van Veen”

Nabokov, Interview Time (1969), cited in Strong Opinions

“I believe that one day a reappraiser will come and declare that, far from having been a frivolous firebird, I was a rigid moralist kicking sin, cuffing stupidity, ridiculing the vulgar and cruel — and assigning sovereign power to tenderness, talent, and pride”

Nabokov, Interview (1971) cited in Strong Opinions

“Lolita has no moral in tow. For me a work of fiction exists only insofar as it affords me what I shall bluntly call aesthetic bliss.”

Nabokov, On a Book Entitled Lolita

Dmitri Nabokov, the novelist’s son and translator, joined the Internet discussion with his recollection that his father thought the idea that either Shade or Kinbote could have invented the other barely less absurd than the idea that each could have invented the other…

https://thenabokovian.org/sites/default/files/2018-01/NABOKV-L-0013164___body.html

As I continue to my project of re-reading Ada, a couple of aspects are a struggle. One is the richness and allusiveness (or less charitably incomprehensibility) of the writing – Brian Boyd’s annotations are a great help there. The other difficult aspect is the motley appeal of the novel. While a clearer understanding of the structures make me appreciate it more, I am certainly not the only reader not to take to Ada. Even Boyd includes a kind of plea for patience and persistence in his Ada: the place of consciousness.

That aspects of the novel, and certainly its protagonists, are seemingly intentionally repellent has puzzled a number of readers. In response some have gone so far as to suggest unorthodox or revisionist readings of Ada. I’m going to consider here

  1. David Auerbach‘s proposal that Van is a radically unreliable narrator and that large portions of the novel are part of his fantasy (Kinbote Triumphant in Hell: The Riddle of Nabokov’s Ada)
  2. Alexey Sklyarenko‘s idea that the editor and typist of the novel dictated by Van and Ada, Ronald Oranger and Violet Knox, are themselves Ada’s grandchildren.
Categories
Arcana Ethics/Metaethics Knausgaard Nabokov Philosophy Politics War in Ukraine

Homo homini lupus

Recent events have stirred in me some thoughts about evil.

For an atheist I spend a, probably unhealthy, amount of time thinking about theodicy. The below may also make it clear why I am comfortable using terms like evil and virtue from a non-religious perspective.

I think all of these have some truth to them (and all are problematic) – and I suspect we could point to examples of all of them, even just in the context of Ukraine. But some, I think, are easier for modernist, rationalist (decent?) people to get their heads around. Some are much less comfortable. This is endlessly fascinating to me.

We may think ourselves secure – but there it is, the dark shape at the door, it seeps through the floor like radon. There is no limit to the limits of our rational power. Evil is a Thing that can ignite, all by itself.

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Arcana Geekery Linux MacBook Air

Plymouth boot splash

Boot splash in Linux

Most operating systems have some sort of branded animation or placeholder while they are loading. In Linux, this niche is filled by plymouth. Unfortunately – and this is far from an exclusive scoop – plymouth is a pain in the arse and doesn’t work very well. I’ll never get back the day of my life I spent getting this working – but maybe I can save someone else the time (or at least the bother).

What follows are my attempts to get some sort of loading screen working for Gentoo on my MacBook Air before X/LXDE loads. This was a ludicrous amount of effort to get something so trivial working.

Unless you have a lot of time to kill, I wouldn’t bother with plymouth at all. But for the curious, here’s what I did.

Categories
Arcana Geekery Kernel Linux MacBook Air Power Consumption

Battery life under Linux

Linux energy efficiency, laptops and battery life

While linux distributions proliferate on servers and desktops (and even on mobile devices in the form of Android) linux desktop OSs running on laptops have often been the poor relation. Most prominently, it’s become somewhat accepted that popular fully-featured distributions like Ubuntu and Mint will have significantly higher power consumption, and worse battery life, than Mac OS – or even Windows. Keeping up with Windows running on the same machine is typically considered a good result.

This was much the situation I found for myself when running Linux Mint on my 2015 Macbook Air. The features of Linux Mint are excellent, and I much prefer the interface and flexibility to Mac OS. Indeed, modern distos like Mint are now by necessity generalised for many different systens, which inevitably introduces some degree of unwanted components (or “bloat”).

What I was interested in was whether it was possible to piece together a Linux system more minimally tailored to my needs, and optimised for the MacBook hardware – and so maintain the freedom and flexibility while regaining the battery life performance.

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Arcana Books Lit Crit Nabokov Reviews

November Nabokoviana

Find what the Sailor has Hidden Priscilla Meyer (1988), Major Literary Characters: Lolita ed Harold Bloom (1993), Lolita: A Janus Text Lance Olsen (1995).

I like pretty much the whole Nabokov canon, underrated earlier Russian works included – but the run he had writing in English and the American years: Sebastian Knight, Lolita, Pale Fire, Pnin and Speak, Memory – is just unbeatable. I think I could read Pale Fire on an endless loop and not get bored by it.

It’s just joyous maximalism and so damn fun to read.

If you’ve not read any Nabokov … I mean, imagine like Joyce or Borges, then imagine the same mastery of language and artistry but in a form that’s so light-handed, so economical and readable, so natural and funny and lively you can just fly over it … and then you stop and realise that the beauty, the virtuosity, the moving humanism, the word games and the literary references are all there – all at once, all part of the same thing. It’s just joyous maximalism and so damn fun to read.

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Arcana Books Nabokov The Feud

Nabokov, Pasternak, Ivinskaya and Zhivago

Beam’s carelessness reaches an apogee in the Boston Globe article Nabokov was such a Jerk.

It’s not worth dwelling on much of the content: there’s little there of substance. But I shall take a look at the claim that Beam makes regarding Doctor Zhivago. Zhivago is important to this story, as while Nabokov hated the book for artistic and political reasons, Wilson latched onto it. “A black cat came between us … Doctor Zhivago” as Nabokov explained.

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Arcana Books Lit Crit Nabokov The Feud

Gerschenkron and Nabokov

This follows up in detail on the review of Alex Beam’s The Feud: Vladimir Nabokov, Edmund Wilson and the end of a beautiful friendship. You can read my (not entirely positive) review here.

The dust-up of the feud, and the spectrum of reviews, seems unsatisyingly damning for Beam. So, as a final word on the exchange, he brings in a deus ex machina in the form of Alexander Gerschenkron. We are told that Gerschenkron – the “known as ‘The Great Gerschenkron’ … a mythic figure … feared no-one, not the Bolsheviks, not the Nazis … certainly not Vladimir Nabokov”. In Beam’s account, Gerschenkron attacks every aspect of Onegin – the translation, the commentary, and the scholarship in a “merciless takedown” – Nabokov never replied, and quietly incorporated his changes into the revision.

This account should trouble us, as it brings convenient closure for Beam and allows him to avoid having to examine the scholarship in detail. How accurate is it?

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Arcana Backgammon Books Reviews

Review: Backgammon Magic

20 Lessons for the Developing Player by John Novak & Radek Dobias (2013)

Backgammon Magic is a slight book of 20 “lessons” – interesting positions with analysis – and a potentially interesting idea, which is that neural-net analysis renders many classic backgammon “rules” incorrect. There is a lot of emphasis on play against AI (and some dismissal of the advice and rules of thumb of backgammon greats), and all the problems purely concern checker play.

Interesting idea but major flaw in analysis