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SÜRGÜNDEKİ RUS ENTELEKTÜELİ: VLADİMİR NABOKOV'UN PNİN ROMANI ÜZERİNE BİR ÇALIŞMA

Year 2024, Volume: 7 Issue: 1, 482 - 495, 30.04.2024
https://doi.org/10.55666/folklor.1368899

Abstract

Russian first-wave emigre literature portrays the experiences of Russian exiled intellectuals who were opponents of the ideology of Leninized Russia, or the Russia of Bolshevism and Bolsheviks. Numerous thousands of Russian intellectuals were forced to leave as a result of their country’s totalitarian leaders. For these intellectuals, Leninized Russia has become a dangerous place, even a prison. In Pnin, Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov shows the lives of first-wave Russian intellectuals in exile and their responses. Through the main character, Professor Pnin, Nabokov tries to illustrate to his readers the path taken by many Russian exiles. He also intends to show how intellectuals in exile like Timofey Pnin wish to be part of a social community and strengthen their sense of belonging in order to overcome loneliness and alienation in the new country. The author also shows how white emigres had difficulties in their new nations, particularly with regard to language, culture, adaption, and acculturation. Professor Pnin and other representatives of the first wave’s feeling of toska towards their homeland, pre-Revolutionary Russia, became stronger when they faced difficulties in the United States of America and when they felt inferior among other colleagues. They keep Russia, with its constraints and regimes, in their hearts and souls. They belong to pre-Revolutionary Russia, where they had a happy childhood in which their toska never ended. The study reveals that Russian intellectuals in exile like Professor Timofey Pnin may partially compensate their feelings of toska towards their home, pre-Revolutionary Russia, through writing. By doing this, they may motivate themselves to achieve peak experience and transform exile into an enriching experience. Moreover, the author demonstrates that being far away from his native land, Russia, allows Pnin to see political and social matters from a double perspective, with their pros and cons. Therefore, it has been determined that being away from his homeland provides the main character with a double perspective.
Thus, the purpose of this study is to examine Vladimir Nabokov’s protagonist, Professor Timofey Pnin's exile experience and his response. The paper intends to show that Nabokov, through his main character, displays the fact that, despite the pain of being far from their homeland, for Russian intellectuals like Professor Timofey, the unwitting choice of exile becomes the right decision.

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EXILE AND RUSSIAN INTELLECTUAL RESPONSE: A STUDY OF VLADIMIR NABOKOV’S PNIN

Year 2024, Volume: 7 Issue: 1, 482 - 495, 30.04.2024
https://doi.org/10.55666/folklor.1368899

Abstract

Russian first-wave emigre literature portrays the experiences of Russian exiled intellectuals who were opponents of the ideology of Leninized Russia, or the Russia of Bolshevism and Bolsheviks. Numerous thousands of Russian intellectuals were forced to leave as a result of their country’s totalitarian leaders. For these intellectuals, Leninized Russia has become a dangerous place, even a prison. In Pnin, Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov shows the lives of first-wave Russian intellectuals in exile and their responses. Through the main character, Professor Pnin, Nabokov tries to illustrate to his readers the path taken by many Russian exiles. He also intends to show how intellectuals in exile like Timofey Pnin wish to be part of a social community and strengthen their sense of belonging in order to overcome loneliness and alienation in the new country. Professor Pnin and other representatives of the first wave’s feeling of toska towards their homeland, pre-Revolutionary Russia, became stronger when they faced difficulties in the United States of America and when they felt inferior among other colleagues. The study reveals that Russian intellectuals in exile like Professor Timofey Pnin may partially compensate their feelings of toska towards their home, pre-Revolutionary Russia, through writing. By doing this, they may motivate themselves to achieve peak experience and transform exile into an enriching experience.
Thus, the purpose of this study is to examine Vladimir Nabokov's protagonist, Professor Timofey Pnin's exile experience and his response. The paper intends to show that Nabokov, through his main character, displays the fact that, despite the pain of being far from their homeland, for Russian intellectuals like Professor Timofey, the unwitting choice of exile becomes the right decision.

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Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Literary Theory
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Zamire İzzetgil 0000-0002-6208-513X

Nazila Heidarzadegan 0000-0003-1238-7903

Early Pub Date April 29, 2024
Publication Date April 30, 2024
Published in Issue Year 2024 Volume: 7 Issue: 1

Cite

APA İzzetgil, Z., & Heidarzadegan, N. (2024). EXILE AND RUSSIAN INTELLECTUAL RESPONSE: A STUDY OF VLADIMIR NABOKOV’S PNIN. Folklor Akademi Dergisi, 7(1), 482-495. https://doi.org/10.55666/folklor.1368899