Eugene Onegin: Commentary and index

Couverture
Princeton University Press, 1990 - 1056 pages

Vladimir Nabokov's famous and brilliant commentary on Pushkin's Eugene Onegin

When Vladimir Nabokov first published his controversial translation of Pushkin's Eugene Onegin in 1964, the great majority of the edition was taken up by Nabokov's witty and exhaustive commentary. Presented here in its own volume, the commentary is a unique scholarly masterwork by one of the twentieth century's greatest writers--a work that Nabokov biographer Brian Boyd calls "the most detailed commentary ever made on" Onegin and "indispensable to all serious students of Pushkin's masterpiece."

In his commentary, Nabokov seeks to illuminate every possible nuance of this nineteenth-century classic. He explains obscurities, traces literary influences, relates Onegin to Pushkin's other work, and in a characteristically entertaining manner dwells on a host of interesting details relevant to the poem and the Russia it depicts. Nabokov also provides translations of lines and stanzas deleted by the censor or by Pushkin himself, variants from Pushkin's notebooks, fragments of a continuation called "Onegin's Journey," the unfinished and unpublished "Chapter Ten," other continuations, and an index.

A work of astonishing erudition and passion, Nabokov's commentary is a landmark in the history of literary scholarship and in the understanding and appreciation of the greatest work of Russia's national poet.

À l'intérieur du livre

Table des matières

FOREWORD
3
Dropped Introductions
10
CHAPTER FOUR
394
CHAPTER SIX 3
3
CHAPTER SEVEN 68
68
CHAPTER EIGHT 129
129
NOTES TO EUGENE ONEGIN 252
252
CHAPTER TEN 311
311
TRANSLATORS EPILOGUE 376
376
THE WORK TRUD 384
384
this paperback edition
1
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