NPPF - From the N-list
Paul Mackin
paul.mackin at verizon.net
Mon Aug 4 09:21:34 CDT 2003
The disease holds a special niche in American culture--as a universally
recognized metonymy for unhappiness.
As at least some of us will remember, for many years the same ad ran in
virtually all popular magazines urging victims of the malady to use a
certain patent medicine whose name I've now forgotten. The ad showed a
body (probably female) covered with ugly blotches, with the caption: Why
suffer the heartbreak of psoriasis? (or maybe it said: don't suffer the
heartbreak of psoriasis)
Anyway, I guess it's not joke.
p.
On Mon, 2003-08-04 at 09:50, David Morris wrote:
> Dear Nabokovians,
>
> Vladimir Nabokov suffered from the skin disease psoriasis. I really do not know
> how severe his complaints were. In February 1937 Nabokov suffered a bad attack
> (Boyd, The Russian Years). On May 15 of that year, he wrote to Véra: `I
> continue with the radiation treatments every day and am pretty much cured. You
> know - now I can tell you frankly - the indescribable torments I endured in
> February, before these treatments, drove me to the border of suicide - a border
> I was not authorized to cross because I had you in my luggage.' He went
> sunbathing a lot as did `radiation therapies' (Selected Letters). Boyd
> mentions one more exacerbation of psoriasis, which occurred in the late sixties
> when the strain of writing Ada fell from Nabokov's shoulders. (Boyd, The
> American Years).
>
> How about his fiction? Nabokov devotes one page, all‑in‑all, to the
> disease, in Ada. He mentions `a spectacular skin disease that had been
> portrayed recently by a famous American novelist in his Chiron and described in
> side-splitting style by a co-sufferer who wrote essays for a London weekly'.
> With this famous writer Nabokov refers to Updike and his novel The centaur; the
> essayist of the a London weekly is hitherto unknown (as far as I know). The two
> psoriasis patients in Ada exchange notes with tips: `Mercury!' or `Höhensonne
> works wonders'. Other pieces of advice are found in a one‑volume
> encyclopedia, and involve taking hot baths at least twice a month and avoiding
> spices. A doctor describes these patients as `Crimson-blotched, silver-scaled,
> yellow-crusted wretches, harmless psoriatics'. The narrator is less pathetic
> and speaks of `meek martyrs'.
>
> And in Pale Fire psoriasis is attributed to Shades daughter who has
> psoriatic fingernails (Pale Fire, 355).
>
> My question is: are there other references to psoriasis in Nabokovs fiction or
> non-fiction? The reason why I ask this is a keen interest in the disease. Some
> years ago I published an article on Literature and psoriasis (British Medical
> Journal 1997:1709-1711), including the above Nabokov references. Now I am
> reworking this material for a booklet on the same theme. Therefore I am very
> eager to know whether I missed certain phrases on the disease by Nabokov.
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
>
> Frans Meulenberg
> Erasmus University / Medical Center
> Department of Philosophy, medical ethics and history
> frans.meulenberg at woordenwinkel.nl
>
>
>
>
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