Lolita and Morality
So, finally, I finished reading Nabokov's Lolita. The immorality of Humbert Humbert and his actions towards Lolita tell us how far one can get from his or her righteous conscience, the very inner quality of guiding to the rightness. It raises questions about our understanding of ourselves in modern times, such as to what extent the human conscience has lost its moral judgment. This is a chronic affliction that a reader might experience in reading Lolita and this is precisely what Humbert Humbert suffers from.
Lolita is a testimony to our pain and suffering in our modern day, which is defeated by an indiscernible joy. We do not understand what Nabokov really says unless we put aside our preconceptions about the moral issues that the book raises.
I thought it was relevant to bring in Schopenhauer's input. In his essay on pessimism, Schopenhauer says that in order to understand this world’s suffering and misery, one must be accustomed to the fact that this world is a penitentiary, a sort of penal colony--not the sort that is a correctional facility. If we accustom ourselves to such a reality, we can find ourselves in front of a campus that guides us through life and perhaps banishes our doubts about the right path to take. If such a view or feeling is created, and if such a desire has kindled a light in the darkness of our conscience, one can then claim to understand what Nabokov means in Lolita.
Lolita is a testimony to our pain and suffering in our modern day, which is defeated by an indiscernible joy. We do not understand what Nabokov really says unless we put aside our preconceptions about the moral issues that the book raises.
I thought it was relevant to bring in Schopenhauer's input. In his essay on pessimism, Schopenhauer says that in order to understand this world’s suffering and misery, one must be accustomed to the fact that this world is a penitentiary, a sort of penal colony--not the sort that is a correctional facility. If we accustom ourselves to such a reality, we can find ourselves in front of a campus that guides us through life and perhaps banishes our doubts about the right path to take. If such a view or feeling is created, and if such a desire has kindled a light in the darkness of our conscience, one can then claim to understand what Nabokov means in Lolita.
