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world literature series-Pale Fire

북리뷰

by English helper 2020. 3. 23. 10:30

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The "Creative Fire" is an annotation of Dr. Charles Kinboat's ancient "Creative Fire" of the famous American poet John Francis Shade (1898 born July 5, 1959 died) and is introduced to the reader with the rest of the correction instructions that Kinbo gives to the editor from the head. KINBOTT concludes with the following sentence, stressing that the reason why he wrote this note was because of the friendship he shared with the poet Shade and, most of all, only he could provide the "human realism" of the work. "For better or worse, it is the President who says the last word."

John Shade's "Creative Fire" is a autobiographical poem composed of four volumes in total and written up to line 999. They include growing up from his birth background, his marriage to his wife Sybil and his daughter Hazel's suicide, his brief peek into the post-life world and life. While Charles Kinboat's comments proceed in the sequence of implementation, the interpretation gradually leads readers to a strange world as implementation progresses. From the first president, Gemblair and Gemblah's king, and Gradus, who wanted to harm the king, are introduced. A revolution will break out in Gembla, a country in the far north. Born on July 5, 1915, King of Russian descent, Karl (1936-1958) was arrested by revolutionary forces and served as a prisoner at the palace before escaping dramatically to the United States. Lectureship at Smith College, Ward served as professor of English in the shade and progressively moved to complete the mission, and stay in his neighbor Gras of Enceladus coming.Alongside the shade, watching him while spending a sleepless night and to detect the presence and passionately in inspiring. Finally Gradus arrives, bullets miss, and poetry remains unfinished. While readers may feel satisfied that they have reached a clear conclusion, Nabokov's "Creative Fire" is a feature-length novel that begins at that point. Whose poem is incomplete? Who was behind the inspiration? Are poets and annotators really different people?

Shade referred to "annotation attached to a difficult unfinished poem" in his "Creative Fire." The more difficult the work is, the more the reader is in a position where he or she has no choice but to rely on the interpretations of But the poet Shade passed away, and Kinboat, who took his language, is an unreliable annotator. The book is based on the interpretation of the book and the translation of the book, which is based on the fact that the author evaluates the poet's appearance ("only needs to be considered waste") and intentionally refers to the reader who is suspicious of the objectivity of the state in advance (that is, "I have no sense of poetry, annotation of poetry, or anything else"), as well as on the reader's own interpretation of the leading commentary. In other words, Keenboats used Shade's Sears and nuclear power plants to write notes and final words. So what is the conclusion that the reader who read this last word makes? If you come up with your own answers, good or bad, right or wrong, it is the "reader" who says the last word. So, is the reader different from Kinbo?

a plot
Renowned American poet John Francis Shade dies in an accident. Dr. Charles Kinboat, who was with him at the scene of the accident, said he would like to publish an annotation, annotating Shade's lengthy poem, "Brilliant Fire," bound for 999. However, the content of annotations in poems of autobiographical tendency goes in the wrong direction at all.

Introducing Bladimir Nabokov
Vladimir Vladimirovich Nabokov was born on April 22, 1899 to a noble family in Saint Petersburg. Growing up with the best education in a well-to-do family, he entered literature at the age of 17, publishing a book of poems at his own expense. After losing his country to the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, he wandered to the U.S. and Europe and died in Montreux, Switzerland on July 2, 1977.
Nabokov studied Russian literature and French literature while attending Cambridge University in England, his first exile. She moved to Berlin in 1922 and began releasing Russian-language works under the pseudonym "Bladimir Shirin," and gained a solid writer's reputation by publishing "Despair" in 1936. The following year, he moved to France to escape the persecution of the Nazis before defecting to the United States again in 1940 with his first English novel, "The Real Life of the Sebastian Knight." While lecturing literature at Cornell University and Harvard University, he pioneered his life as an English writer under the name "Nabokov," not "Sirin." He shot to become a world-class writer in 1955 with the novel "Lolita Syndrome," and later devoted himself to creating and wrote a number of works, including "Creative Fire," "Ada or Passion," and left behind the unpublished work "Original of Laura."

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