Intertextual Dialogue In Lolita


ISSN 0258 0802. LITERATÛRA 2007 49(5)
POSTMODERN TRANSGRESSIONS OF NARRATIVE:
AN INTERTEXTUAL DIALOGUE BETWEEN J. BANVILLE S
THE BOOK OF EVIDENCE (1989) AND V. NABOKOV S
LOLITA (1955)
Jûratë Butkutë
PhD Student, Department of Literary History and Theory
Vilnius University
John Banville s novels and his assertions about maintains that Banville belongs to a tradition of
literature have generated a common view of this Irish writers, such as Joyce, Beckett, Flann
contemporary Irish author as an ultimate stylist, O Brien, who  interrogate the very possibility of
a formalist whose perception of and engagement writing and  explore fundamental tensions
with aesthetics is often light-heartedly attributed between imagination and memory, narration and
the features of postmodernism. history, self and language 3.
A literary critic who takes a special interest in As a student of Banville s novels, I find it
Banville s work, Ingo Berensmeyer1 informs us crucial to raise a question about the ways this
that numerous critics, especially those outside Irish author addresses the issue of the possibility
Ireland, have termed Banville an exponent of of writing in the postmodern age which actually
 international postmodernism on the premise of challenges the very notion of representation.
the metafictional nature of Banville s texts. Banville s intertextually rich body of work,
However, as he further elaborates2, the fact that a numerous references to Nabokov, Beckett, Joyce,
number of texts in the history of literature have Proust and many other authors suggests an
displayed features of self-referential mode of intertextual method of reading. In this particular
writing even before the advent of postmodernism case, I will explore the nature of a dialogic
or modernism, for that matter, makes this claim a discourse between his novel The Book of
sweeping generalisation. A more astute judgement Evidence4 which belongs to his trilogy Frames5
of Banville s work, in Berensmeyer s view, is and Vladimir Nabokov s Lolita6, a text that has
presented by a philosopher Richard Kearney who
3
Berensmeyer, 2006, 304.
4
1 John Banville, The Book of Evidence, London:
Ingo Berensmeyer,  Between Canons: John
Picador, 1989.
Banville s Reception in National and International
5
John Banville, Frames Trilogy. The Book of
Contexts , The Current Debate about the Irish Literary
Evidence, Ghosts, Athena, London: Picador, 2001.
Canon, ed. Helen Thompson, Lewiston, Queenston,
6
Vladimir Nabokov, The Annotated Lolita, ed.
Lampeter: The Edwin Mellen Press, 2006, 292.
2 Alfred Appel, Jr., London: Penguin Books, 1955, 1991.
Berensmeyer, 2006, 304.
17
been widely examined as an example of post- his deceased father s collection of pictures,
modernism. The objective of the present paper Freddie leaves his home in fury and visits
therefore is to establish whether both of these Whitewater estate and gallery which belongs to
texts operate in the same dimension of post- his friends. There he spots a  Portrait of a Woman
modern aesthetics by discerning the structural with Gloves , ambiguously attributed to one of
strategies of their narratives and discussing the 17th century Dutch painters. Mesmerised by
semantic implications that the reading of the texts this painting, he creates a story about the woman
may lend. The analysis will be based on a question, in the portrait and narrates the imagined interaction
whether the semantic structure of Banville s text between her and the painter while she is being
goes beyond the notions of postmodern ontology painted in his imagination. Freddie returns to
and if it does, in what direction of discursive Whitewater next day and in an attempt to steal the
practices does it tend to develop. painting he is caught red-handed by a maid. He
At first, the premises for the intertextual grabs the portrait and kidnaps the maid and in a
reading of The Book of Evidence have to be flight of frenzy simply hammers her to death in a
examined by delineating specific features of the car that he steals the same morning from a car rental.
discursive and diegetic planes7 of the text and After the murder he stays with a family friend
for this purpose a brief account of the plot will be Charlie for a month until he is arrested by the police.
presented. The arrest is followed by his interrogation and a
The story of the novel is related by a homo- trial whereby he is pleaded guilty of murder.
diegetic narrator, an imprisoned Irishman The discursive level of the text exhibits a clear
Frederick Montgomery or otherwise referred to departure from the scheme of the crime fiction
as Freddie. A confession of his crime, addressed genre8, within the framework of which, at first
to the jury and the judge, begins with his self- sight, this text might be read. This can be
consciously defined resolve to explore the state observed in the fragmented, non-linear narration
of affairs that led him to the demise of his that is permeated with analeptical and proleptical
imprisonment. From a fragmented account we digressions and deviations from a teleological
learn that he, a scholar of hard sciences works at discourse that the examples of the genre of crime
a university in America for a couple of months, fiction would normally display. The features
where he meets his would-be wife Daphne, quits mentioned above and frequent self-referential
his academic pursuit and goes to a Mediterranean comments of the narrator, questioning the validity
island with her, which he is forced to leave of the strategy of the narrative that is based on
because of his gruesome financial involvement the cause and effect principle and challenging
with the local mafia. Alone, he travels to Ireland the reader who is  lusting after meaning in
to his mother s estate who he hopes will replenish Freddie s words9, direct the reader in search for
his empty pockets, however, his plan falls the paradigmatic, rather than sintagmatic relations
through. Upon learning that his mother had sold that the narrative of this text may be based on. In
7
The terms  discursive and  diegetic planes of
8
a narrative are used from a narratological theory For further references on the crime fiction genre
presented by Seymour Chatman in Seymour Chatman, refer to John Scaggs, Crime Fiction. The New Critical
Story and Discourse. Narrative Structure in Fiction and Idiom, London and New York: Routledge, 2005.
9
Film, Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1978. Banville, 1989, 24.
18
other words, the reader is encouraged to look for With the premises for the intertextual reading
a conspicuous presence of other literary or of the text established that are based on the inner
possibly hermeneutic traditions than the crime structure of the novel, one may turn to the actual
fiction genre and define the significance of their references to Nabokov s Lolita. As it has been
operation in the text. mentioned above, the narrator engages himself
The diegetic level of the narrative seems to in the polemics with the genre of crime fiction which
be constructed around Freddie s preoccupation is also revealed by the narrator s adversity to a
of an epistemological nature, i.e. the question of psychological portrait of a criminal, as for example,
what laws govern the world that he inhabits or one can find in Dostoyevsky s Crime and
what is the structure of the real that Freddie, as Punishment11. Another narrator in another book
the subject experiences. This question is displays a similar approach to a psychological or
addressed through Freddie s interaction with psychoanalytic depiction of a criminal, that is,
other numerous characters in the novel. His Humbert Humbert who on numerous occasions
references to their authentic mode of being as expresses his disgust with the Dostoyevkyan
opposed to his sense of drift and lack of ethical-psychological delineation of a murderer.
authenticity forms a dialectical relationship The first intertextual reference to Nabokov s
between him and the rest of the world as that Lolita in The Book of Evidence seemingly
between him and the Other10. A recurrent motive indicates that the relationship between the two
of a threshold in the narrative upon which a novels is that of textual transworld identification
meeting with the Other may take place is never rather than a homonymy12 in Eco s terms. The
trespassed and thus Freddie ends up repetitively reference is in the third sentence of Freddie s
experiencing the possibility of identification with narrative, describing his reflection on his
the Other, perception of its structure and the imprisonment and the reaction of the world to
imminent loss of it. All these observations suggest him:  They should let in people to view me, the
that the Other is perceived by the subject, Freddie, girl-eater, svelte and dangerous, padding to and
as an unrecognisable structure which possibly fro in my cage, my terrible green glance flickering
may have some clearly defined demarcations. past the bars, give them something to dream about,
Thus, to the implied reader the other characters
and the narrative situations in which they appear
11
Fyodor Dostoyevsky Crime and Punishment,
seem to represent certain semantic codes. Given
transl. by Jessie Coulson, Oxford University Press, 1998.
the metafictional nature of the novel, it becomes 12
Umberto Eco,  Lector in Fabula: pragmatic
strategy in a metanarrative text, in The Role of the
clear that these semantic codes yet again point
Reader: Explorations in the Semiotics of Texts, Bloo-
to specific traditions of literary representation,
mington and London, Indiana University Press, 1979,
with which the implied author is establishing a 229. Eco defines a  transworld identity with reference
to an identification between certain elements of two
polemical relationship.
worlds (they may be two fictional worlds). If an entity in
one world differs from its  prototype in another world
10
According to J. Lacan, the term  the Other indi- only in accidental properties, not in essentials, and if
cates alienation, a lack of pre-linguistic jouissance, a there is a one-to-one correspondence between the
structurally incomplete representation of something prototype and its other-world variant, then the two
ultimately unrepresentable that the subject experiences in entities can be considered identical even though they
the process of identification within the field of linguistic exist in distinct worlds. Consequently, if a prototype
representation, i.e. the symbolic register. Ref. to Jacques and its replica differ in essential properties, and not just
Lacan, Écrits. A Selection, transl. by Bruce Fink, New York, the accidental ones, then, this may be a case of mere
London: W. W. Norton & Company, 2002. homonymy rather than transworld identity.
19
tucked up cosy in their beds of a night .13 The Indeed, at the centre of both novels we have
word  girl-eater presented in an oxymoronic narrators who are unreliable and who admit it
proximity to the word  svelte in this ironic themselves in a self-referential mode of narration.
description points to the cultured paedophile and They are both  cultured killers , whose crimes
killer Humbert Humbert and his mode of describing are related with aesthetics and a transgression of
himself. Moreover, the actual reference to the bars boundaries between art and reality. Freddie kills
of his cell refers to the field of empirical reality, i.e, Josie Bell because she hinders him in his attempt
V. Nabokov s account of the newspaper story that to steal the  Portrait of the Woman with Gloves
inspired him to write a work such as Lolita who he tries to resurrect to life through his
presented in the novel s afterword On a Book imagination mediated through language and
Entitled  Lolita . The story is about  an ape in whose fictive existence is more real to him than
the Jardin des Plantes, who after months of coaxing the life of a  real person. Humbert Humbert
by the scientists, produced the first drawing ever seduces a child Dolores and kills a playwright
charcoaled by an animal: the sketch showed the Clare Quilty because the first one lives in his
bars of the poor creature s cage. 14 Although, consciousness through his desire that is bound
Nabokov does not elaborate on the meaning of by his literary games and the latter ironically
this story, a reader can deduce that the  bars in unravels such nature of his passion and rids
Lolita are the passion that imprisons Humbert Humbert Humbert of his weapons using the tools
Humbert which is rendered in the most aesthetised of Humbert s crime, i.e. the overpowering dominance
form. Thus, the semantic content of the  bars is of art and literature when faced with a decision of
the actual form or shape of representation of an ethical nature. It is also noteworthy, that the
 reality in the novel. The same narrative dominant, objects of artistic representation for both narrators
as it has been observed, is employed in the The are women. In the Lacanian sense of the word both
Book of Evidence. The question is, however, of them represent the ultimate Other to the
whether both narrators and both texts exemplify protagonists and they appear in the narrative as
an adherence to the ontological postmodern objects of male gazing with whom the protagonists
aesthetics, which extols the disintegration of the seek to establish an authentic relationship.
subject by asking such questions as Dick Higgins Regardless of the fact that in Lolita Dolores
suggests in his A Dialectic of Centuries , i.e.  Which is a typical American child of the 60 s with all the
world is this? What is to be done in it? Which of my attributes that such a child is supposed to display,
selves is to do it? rather than asking the questions an old-fashioned aesthete Humbert creates his
of epistemological nature  How can I interpret this own fictive contruct of her as a nymphete with
world of which I am a part? And what am I in it? .15 clearly defined poetic functions and forms of her
The answer to this can be provided by further sensuality. The narrator achieves this through
analysis of both narratives, which leads to a intertextual games and a self-regarding play of
conclusion that the nature of the identity of these signifiers. As a character Lolita undergoes a
texts is that of a homonymy, after all, and not metamorphosis and, according to critic John
transworld identification. Pier16, her metamorphosis is isomorphic with that
16
13
John Pier,  Narrative Configurations in John Pier
Banville, 1989, 3.
14
(ed.) The Dynamics of Narrative Form. Studies in
Nabokov, 1991, 311.
15
Anglo-American Narratology, Berlin, New York: Walter
In Brian McHale, Postmodernist Fiction,
de Gruyter, 2004, 257.
London: Routledge, 1996, p. 2.
20
of the text, since Lolita functions not only as a In other words, the roles of writer  reader
character but as a text as well. are transgressed and the function of textual
As J. Pier notes, the narrative of this text is an representation balances on the level of the
accumulation of various strategies: it has a text superficial semiosis that does nothing else but
within a text, elements of a fairy-tale, coincidences reflects upon its own narrative structures.
and geometrical mirroring patterns which are In The Book of Evidence such a transgression
based on Nabokov s passion for lepidoptery, of reader-writer functions also takes place and it
chess and tennis games. The most ostensible happens through an intertextual relation with
frames of narrative configuration in the text are Lolita. The most obvious allusion to Nabokov s
those of the bereaved lover, the Doppelgänger text found in The Book of Evidence is the name
and the love triangle which allow a reader to trace of the car, a  Humber that Freddie  rents from a
the directions of Lolita s semiosis. car rental called  Melmoth s car hire , which
Without going too deep into Lolita s analysis, becomes an agent of his crime, as he drives it to
a few aspects may be singled out in terms of the Whitewater in pursuit of his picture and it
framework of the author  reader relationship as eventually happens to be the site of the murder
it operates in the narrative of the novel. To that Freddie commits18. The  Humber reference
Humbert, Lolita is his text, which is dominated by is a clearly stated allusion to Lolita s Humbert
the motive of the bereaved lover as the numerous Humbert. Whereas  Melmoth also refers to the
references to Edgar Allan Poe s poem  Annabel old car Melmoth which belongs to Humbert s
Lee indicate17. The reader of his narrative is Clare second wife, Charlotte Haze that he drives when
Quilty, who upon his engagement with Humbert s he sets out on his travels with the bereaved Lolita
text, introduces the motives of Doppelgänger and across America and which also takes him to his
a love triangle in the narrative. Thus, an ideal alter-ego Quilty who he murders.
reader, Quilty, introduces his own strategies of The name  Melmoth leads the reader to yet
reading of the text that are different to those of another intertextual frame, that is, a text of Irish
Humbert, who may be considered as the author author, Charles Robert Maturin  his gothic novel
of the narrative. Quilty creates an alternative text Melmoth the Wanderer (1820)19 which relates a
to that of Humbert s, ridding him of his sense of story of a scientist John Melmoth. Melmoth sells
authorship over his creation. A conclusion may be his soul to the devil in return receiving extra 150
drawn that the meaning of Lolita as a character years of life which he spends in search of a person
and a text changes with a gaze of a new reader who could share his fate with him but having
turned upon her/it in the process of representation. failed to do so, he returns to his home in Ireland
to die. A certain element of the narrative structure
17
found in Melmoth the Wanderer may be paralleled
Nabokov, 1991, 328. In his Notes to Lolita Alfred
Appel, Jr indicates 21 instances of references to Edgar
with the one in The Book of Evidence which is
Allan Poe s  Annabel Lee found in Lolita, which
the use of a portrait in the story of Melmoth. Young
exceed the number of allusions to works of any other
writers in this novel. As the commentator suggests (in
Nabokov, 1991, 330), the intertextual references to
18
Banville, 1989, 99 118.
E. A. Poe evoke a number of aspects common to Lolita
19
Charles Robert Maturin, Melmoth the Wanderer,
and life and texts by E.A. Poe, for example, the  child
The University of Adelaide Library: Books@adelaide,
bride motif, a Doppelgänger tale (Poe s  William
1820, 2004, at http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/m/ma-
Wilson ) and a detective tale. Nabokov also questions
turin/charles/melmoth/melmoth.zip, accessed in 2006/
and parodies Poe s Romantic vision of language and
10/19.
literature through numerous references.
21
Melmoth sees a portrait in his uncle s house which Humbert s movement through narrative takes
depicts a demised relative of his who drew a pact the direction of transgression of boundaries
with the devil and whose gaze follows his between life and art by creating a fictive, post-
movements in the house from the pictorial fames. modern construct out of a  real person, Dolores
Similarly, in The Book of Evidence Freddie Haze. In the case of the narrator of The Book of
declares his faith to the  Portrait of the Woman Evidence the direction of the movement is the
with Gloves by committing his crime and being opposite: Freddie casts his artistic eye at a woman
constantly seized by the observant eyes of the that is already enclosed in a perfect world of
lady represented in it20. representation, a 17th century Dutch painting and
All the references mentioned above formulate tries to convert her into reality. His description of
certain semantic paradigms in Lolita and The the woman in the portrait begins in the following
Book of Evidence. These are a paradigm of way:
travelling, a paradigm of Doppelgänger and a
I have stood in front of other, perhaps greater
paradigm of artistic representation of reality.
paintings, and not been moved as I am moved
Without focusing on the Doppelgänger element,
by this one. [& ] when I look at it my heart
which can be exclusively elaborated on as a
contracts. There is something in the way the
separate subject, I shall examine only on the first woman regards me, the querulous, mute
insistence of her eyes, which I can neither escape
and the third semantic elements which will
nor assuage. She requires of me some great
suggest major differences of meaning in relation
effort, some tremendous feat of scrutiny and
to the ways of representation in both novels.
attention, of which I do not think I am capable.
On the diegetic level Humbert s travels begin
It is as if she were asking me to let her live. 21
with his moving from Europe to America in search
Then Freddie summons his mimetic talent to
of a substitute for his deceased young object of
reproduce her life with minute details of her
love, Annabel Leigh. Further in the text, Humbert
character and relationships with other people. His
undertakes a trip around the USA with Dolores,
exercise of artistic representation in this case
in the course of which he loses his identity as the
requires further explanation which reveals that
author of his text. In The Book of Evidence
Freddie finds himself in a controversial situation
Freddie as we saw earlier also travels from Europe
as an artist, both a writer and a reader, who
to America in pursuit of an academic career and
undertakes the task of solving the enigma of the
then to a Mediterranean island from which he
Other or perceiving and representing the unre-
returns to Ireland. In Ireland Freddie s journey
cognisable and unrepresentable reality. In his
culminates in his ultimate, if somewhat perverted,
attempt to recreate the woman in the portrait
glory of artistic perception through his obsession
Freddie employs a method of ekphrasis, which is
with the portrait. Thus, one might infer that the
a verbal commentary on a work of visual arts.
paradigm of travelling of the two authors of their
Such form of representation accentuates the gaze
narrative yields diverging results, however, this
of the observer who is engaged in the act of the
paradigm acquires even more complicated
transformation of the object of representation as
semantic implications when it is considered in
the object is withdrawn from its primary reality, in
relation to the paradigm of artistic representation
of reality in both novels.
21
20
Banville, 1989, 104 105.
Banville, 1989, 105, 215.
22
this case, a fictive, artistically rendered reality artistic act of formal configuring, just as Humbert
which is demarcated by the frames of the painting. is in his re-creation of Dolores Haze. He, like
Thus, Freddie is involved in the double process Humbert is also appalled by the intrusion of
of reading and writing of the object whereby the another reader in his act of telling, the reader being
object itself is sacrificed to a new structure, a the maid of Whitewater, Josie Bell who introduces
new medium of representation, a literary narrative. an unexpected turn to his narrative with her
However, the ekphrastic form of representation appearance at the moment of him stealing the
that Freddie chooses to employ determines a portrait and thus ruining his text marked by
demise of his as an author and a reader of his text. semantic unity that he seeks to sustain in relation
Such a semantic movement may be explained by to the object of his representation. As we know,
the fact that Freddie s description of the woman in Josie pays for this intrusion with her life. The
the portrait is based on the principle of pure mimesis story does not end here, and following the
in the sense of how Paul Ricoeur uses this term22, principle of triple mimesis, Freddie, as a creator
which is  the circle of triple mimesis . It consists and a reader of his own text returns from narrative
of the following elements:  1) the prefiguring of text to action a changed man. In his reflections
our life-world as it seeks to be told; 2) the over the crime that he committed Freddie sets out
configuring of the text in the act of telling, and to recreate Josie.
3) the refiguring of our existence as we return At this point of analysis, it is worthwhile
from narrative text to action. What is significant, returning to the mode of his representations of
as Richard Kearney indicates23, is that the referral characters like Josie, a representative of the
of the narrative text back to the life of the author ultimate Other in his narrative. The mode of
and forward to the life of the reader belies the narration that is used in their creation is that of
structuralist maxim that the text relates to nothing mimesis proper, just like in the ekphrastic
but itself. The logic of triple mimesis is at work in description presented about the woman in the
Freddie s case of constructing a new reality for portrait, i.e. the nature of their representation is based
the woman with gloves. Thus, the essential on a well-established relationship between a signifier
difference between Freddie, the narrator and the and a signified. However, Freddie constantly
author of his text and Humbert, the narrator and challenges pure mimesis by providing comments, such
the author of his text becomes apparent. If as  how many of these do I have to create 24 which
Humbert in his configuring of Lolita s character brings one back to the representation of himself in
and text enters gleefully the linguistic play of the novel. And indeed his portrait assumes multiple
postmodern aesthetics of continuous semiosis, forms: Freddie appears in numerous fluctuating
Freddie in his tale-telling performance appears to identities which are disclosed in various narrative
be battling with the opposite of what the situations: as a svelte cultured killer, a scholar, a
postmodern maxim prescribes. sentimental lover, a Joycean seeker of a father, and,
Indeed, in his mimetic representation of the most importantly, as a writer of his fragmented
woman with gloves, Freddie is engaged in the confession, playing with words. Thus, in his relation
to the Other, appearing in the form of mimetic
representation, he is a comic narrator at a loss.
22
In Richard Kearney, On Stories, London and New
York: Routledge, 2002, 133.
23 24
Richard Kearney, 133. Banville, 1989, 92.
23
He constitutes a parody of Nabokovian Humbert narrative, allowing for the endless signification to
who is himself placed within the framework of take place in the representation of reality and thus,
postmodern mode of representation, whereas possibly, revealing the Other by disengagement
Freddie, who is overtly distrustful of the mimetic with the autocratic authorial voice that Freddie
mode, paradoxically succumbs to it in his ultimate unwittingly exercises in his narrative.
representation of the woman in a portrait, the To conclude, in terms of the mode of
ultimate Other. It is, therefore, rather ironic that at representation, Lolita s discourse reveals
the end of his tale Freddie admits that after he Humbert s flaw as a character and a narrator,
committed his crime and threw the portrait into the however, the discursive metamorphosis of Lolita s
ditch, he gained knowledge that  something [in text and the endless process of semiosis of the
the portrait] was dead 25. Thus, in other words, meaning of this text, makes it a perfect example of
the Other, be it the woman in the portrait or Josie postmodernist ontology. Whereas, Freddie s
Bell, remains an enigma, the incomplete Other, the ostensible fluctuation between mimetic and poetic
Other with the ultimate lack of essence that could forms of representation in The Book of Evidence,
not be grasped in the mimetic form of telling. inscribes a polemical relationship of this text with
Therefore, it is possible to suggest that the task the postmodern ontology thus revealing only a
Freddie sets himself in creating Josie is going to be possibility of approaching the recognition of and
that of a reconciliation with the postmodern, of accessibility to the plurality of worlds. The question
giving her the multiple shapes of appearing in the remains though, whether this reconciliation with
the postmodern, that Freddie possibly achieves in
his further narratives of the trilogy Frames, is going
25
Banville, 1989, 215.
to be valid in the pursuit of the complete Other.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Allen, Graham, 2000: Intertextuality, London: D Hoker, Elke, 2004: Visions of Alterity. Representation
Routledge. in the Works of John Banville, Amsterdam, New York,
NY: Rodopi.
Banville, John. 1989: The Book of Evidence,
London: Picador, 1989. Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, 1998: Crime and Punishment,
transl. by Jessie Coulson, Oxford University Press.
Banville, John, 2001: Frames Trilogy. The Book of
Evidence, Ghosts, Athena, London: Picador. Duff, David (ed.), 2000: Modern Genre Theory,
Harlow: Longman.
Banville, John, 1995:  Nabokov s Dark Treasures ,
in The New York Review of Books, 5 Oct. Eco, Umberto, 1979: The Role of the Reader:
Explorations in the Semiotics of Texts, Bloomington and
Berensmeyer, Ingo, 2006:  Between Canons: John
London, Indiana University Press.
Banville s Reception in National and International
Contexts , The Current Debate about the Irish Literary Genette, Gérard, 1980: Narrative Discourse. An
Canon, ed. Helen Thompson, Lewiston, Queenston, Essay in Method, Ithaca and New York: Cornell Univer-
Lampeter: The Edwin Mellen Press. sity Press.
Chatman, Seymour, 1978: Story and Discourse. Fink, Bruce, 1995: The Lacanian Subject. Between
Narrative Structure in Fiction and Film, Ithaca and Lon- Language and Jouissance, Princeton, New Jersey:
don: Cornell University Press. Princeton University Press.
Derrida, Jacques, 2000:  The Law of Genre In Duff, Kearney, Richard, 2002: On Stories, London and
David (ed.), Modern Genre Theory, Harlow: Longman. New York: Routledge.
24
Lacan, Jacques, 2002: Écrits. A Selection, translated Scaggs, John, 2005: Crime Fiction. The New Critical
by Bruce Fink, New York, London: W. W. Norton &
Idiom, London and New York: Routledge.
Company.
Simons, Jon (ed.), 2004: Contemporary Critical
McHale, Brian, 1996: Postmodernist Fiction,
Theorists. From Lacan to Said, Edinburgh: Edinburgh
London: Routledge.
University Press, Ltd.
McMinn, Joseph, 1999: The Supreme Fictions of
Wood, Michael, 1995:  Lolita Revisited in New
John Banville, Manchester and New York: Manchester
England Review, vol. 17.
University Press.
Þukauskaitë, Audronë, 2001: Anapus signifikanto
Nabokov, Vladimir, 1959, 1991: The Annotated
principo. Dekonstrukcija, psichoanalizë, ideologijos kri-
Lolita, London: Penguin Books.
Pier, John, 2004: The Dynamics of Narrative Form. tika, Aidai.
Studies in Anglo-American Narratology, Berlin, New
York: Walter de Gruyter.
Author s address
Department of Literary History and Theory
Vilnius University
Universiteto str. 5, Lt-01513 Vilnius
E-mail: jurate.butkute@flf.vu.lt
25


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