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Lolita经典读后感10篇

2017-12-15 21:27:02 来源:文章吧 阅读:载入中…

Lolita经典读后感10篇

  《Lolita》是一本由Vladimir Nabokov著作,Vintage出版的Paperback图书,本书定价:USD 15.00,页数:317,文章吧小编精心整理的一些读者的读后感,希望对大家能有帮助。

  《Lolita》读后感(一):Nabokov on Lolita

  abokov on Lolita

  The following extracts are what Nabokov said about the book (I did not know the exact occasion as I read the book in a poor-quality PDF file) and may help one have a glimpse of Nabokov’s stance on literature.

  (下面的内容是纳博科夫的一个类似后记的东西,因为我没有纸质书无法核对。可以帮助读者管窥他对文学的一些思考)

  “I happen to be the kind of author who on starting to work on a novel has no other purpose than to get rid of that book…”

  “there are at least three themes which are utterly taboo as far as most American publishers are concerned. The two others are: a Negro-White marriage which is a complete and glorious success resulting in lots of children and grandchildren; and the total atheist who lives a happy and useful life, and dies in his sleep at the age of 106.” (the other is, of course, pedophilia as in Lolita)

  “For me a work of fiction exists only insofar as it affords me what I shall bluntly call aesthetic bliss,that is a sense of being somehow, somewhere, connected with other states of being where art (curiosity, tenderness, kindness, ecstasy) is the norm. There are not many such books. All the rest is either topical trash or what some call the Literature of Ideas, which very often is topical trash coming in huge blocks of plaster that are carefully transmitted from age to age until somebody comes along with a hammer and takes a good crack at Balzac, at Gorki, at Mann."

  “It is childish to study a work of fiction in order to gain information about a country or a social class or about the author.”

  《Lolita》读后感(二):a poem

  A good book makes you feel it's a book, like a great movie makes you feel it's a movie.

  Ipad or kindle is not suitable for such books, they are written to be printed on papers.

  Lolita is one of them.

  It's a cold depiction of a romance between a sick middle-aged man and a curious girl.

  Years ago, I wanted to find some erotic paragraphs in it, yet failed. Contrary to the common misunderstanding, it is not a book on enthusiastic sex between a man and a girl. Rather, it's a pessimistic portrait of a love story, a sex fantasy, and vanity of life.

  And it's a poem.

  《Lolita》读后感(三):若干年后的暇想

  读《Lolita》是三、四年前的事了。

  读的时候非常吃力,恨透了到处乱布迷宫的Nabokov。越是非母语写作的作家,越喜欢玩文字游戏。

  可是读完之后却经常不经意地反思起来。竟然想再找出来读一次。

  读过卡夫卡的《变形记》(metamorphisis)之后回想起来,《洛丽塔》的主题也是“变形”,或是(昆虫的)“蜕变”(metamorphisis)。随着洛丽塔从未成年少女长成一个女人,Humbert的内心也完成了他的“蜕变”。他对幼女的畸恋经过痛苦的脱茧,变成了深刻的爱情。当他再一次见到洛丽塔,已不再是旧日少女的形态,但他依然是爱她的——或者应该说他已经爱上她了。因为那不再是过去为了满足痴狂情欲的占有,那是一种不论她处境的近乎无条件的爱,这是一种与“不计回报地付出”相关的爱。

  作者Nabokov热爱收集蝴蝶标本,他对蝴蝶的这一蜕变非常着迷。

  abokov认为卡夫卡是一流的作家。他对卡夫卡的研究在西方文学界有很重要的地位。

  他大概可以深刻体会卡夫卡内心那个未成年少男用毕生的能量去挣扎抗争的痛苦与勇气。卡夫卡虽然没有完成蜕变就已死去,可是他诚实裸露自己的勇气,是热衷顾弄玄虚的Nabokov做不到的。人生因悲剧而壮美。可是热爱棋局博奕、出身贵族的Nabokov却小心地把自己内心的“蛹”用文字游戏做成的“城堡”包围得好好的。

  卡夫卡却不一样。他是个向着处处充满危险的成人世界敞开柔弱心胸的小男孩。任何一个愿意用心去感受的人都可以在他的作品里触摸到他满是伤痕的鲜活的内心。

  abokov更是如此。两个男人之间的心心相惜来源于此。(写到这里我想起村上春树。)

  任何成为“经典”的作品都必然是universal的。“蜕变” (metamorphisis)是生命的必然。

  《Lolita》读后感(四):美丽的书(或:每个人心中都有一个Humbert)

  如果我不是正好在读这本书的时候开始养兔子,我恐怕不会意识到这个故事会与我本人有任何联系。我就是Humbert Humbert,Humbert the Tenderest,无条件地爱它们,它们就是我的洛。它们就像洛,任性恶劣不可捉摸,有时候让我控制不了地向它们发火,我就成了Humbert the Terrible——这样爱恨交织的心情,Humbert Humbert,我也懂得。我又会后悔难过,想要抱着它们,给它们安慰。但是它们在我怀里发抖,我知道它们怕我,讨厌我,它们永远不会懂得我对它们的爱——但是我却不管不顾地要把它们禁锢在怀中,因为人啊人,怎么突然之间会涌起这样一种对毫无抗拒之力的弱者的占有欲,可鄙的,可悲的,又是无奈的,辛酸的,而我就成了Humbert the Miserable。

  作者说写这本书完全不是为了进行道德教育,而是一种美学上的追求。我想补充的是这种美不是我一开始所认为的病态的美,离奇的美。它的美在于它对人的情感中某些幽深的东西的捕捉,对人性中某些共通的东西的映射,在于它以一种病态、离奇的方式,照见了我们自己。

  最后,这本并非旨在教育的书,教育了我去改变我与我的兔子的关系。

  《Lolita》读后感(五):Art in its purest form

  hould really have read through every single word instead of listening. THIS is art, in its almost purest form. Exactly the same refined euphoria experienced when admiring great paintings/music. Got to wonder for how many times he set out to refine it to absolute perfection. Also, another reason for its greatness, as expertly put in the book, is that "The moral sense in mortals is the duty we have to pay on mortal sense of beauty." One would argue that H.H. and Lolita were definitely not psycho enough, and the fundamental values expressed by Nabokov in many places are actually criminally conservative. But it's exactly this extra layer of humanity/complexity, the stinging compunction that sometimes tears H.H. apart, the almost inexplicably transcendental yet totally palpable passion he holds for Lolita, the ultimate tragic ending, that makes this work weigh heavily on your mind. Otherwise it would just read more similar to a delicately woven porn, which will still make a delightful read and 100 times better than your run-of-the-mill porn productions for sure, but just totally irrelevant in a literary sense.

  ut still, there's something that bothered me when I first started to read it, and it had kept me uneasy since then. Now I am finally able to state unequivocally what it is, and probably be rid of it for good, once and for all. No, it's not Lolita, of course no. It's the fate of Charlotte, and the possible insinuation it might bear on our very own lives. At least H.H. had his share of guilt and compunction for Lolita, but from the beginning to end, he didn't feel a thing for poor Charlotte, except for viewing her as a fool and perhaps a tool. Yeah, her deeds were indeed so detestable and harebrained on their own, that she a kind of courted demon by herself. But could such deeds justify her thoroughly miserable end? Shall H.H.'s "moral burden" totally dismiss the comparatively more horrible crime he had committed on Charlotte? Probably no. But anyways, our qualms should only be allowed to wander within the book. Art is art, and to unscrupulously entertain any connotation whatsoever that it has anything in parallel with our own lives would be even more foolhardy. The jury's always out but at least for now we can quite confidently assure ourselves that we have clear consciences.

  .S.: Funny thing is, this is the very first(quite probably also the most abstruse) work of English literature I cluelessly tried to start reading 6 years ago, only to pick it up again and finish now. Can still vividly recall how I could barely go through 2 pages in 1 hour(though the impact of this book on me has likely already been huge throughout the years). How things have changed. Still, the hopeless, senseless and futile essence of the world won't ever change, that's for sure.

  《Lolita》读后感(六):The Pay Off Of Beauty美丽的代价

  注:本文的中文版及英文版都为作者原创,转发请注明出处。

  lt;Lolita>,one of Nabokov's most famous novels around the world, created a new vocabulary synonymized the word "nymphet", which is the word that Humbert, the protagonist in this book was crazy about.

  《洛丽塔》,是纳博科夫世界著名的小说之一,因为这本书而出现了书中主角Humbert为之疯狂的"洛丽塔“这个新词汇。

  Humbert fell in love with Lolita on his first sight: her name, her everything was attractive to him. He soliloquizes her name repetitively: "Lolita, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul. Lo-lee-ta: the tip of the tongue taking a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo. Lee. Ta." He was surprised when Lolita seduced him in the motel; He started a long journey with Lolita all around America. Unlike other travel novels, their journey was purely sexual without any rejoiced scenery or any spiritual inspiration. It was an escape from the reality, while Humbert tried to escape from anywhere there might be someone knowing them, and Lolita tried to escape from Humbert's maniac control.

  Humbert在第一次见到洛丽塔的时候就对她一见钟情:她的名字,她的一切都散发着魅力。他一遍又一遍念着洛丽塔的名字:“洛丽塔,我生命的光,我下体的火,我的罪恶,我的灵魂。洛--丽--塔:舌尖轻轻在上颚间游走三次,在第三次的时候碰触牙齿。洛--丽--塔。”他惊讶于洛丽塔在宾馆中对他的引诱;他与洛丽塔开始了周游美国的旅行。但不同于其他旅行主题的小说,他们的旅途是纯粹关于性的,没有任何优美的风景和任何灵魂的升华。那是一次逃离现实的旅途,Humbert试图逃离任何可能有认识他们的人的地方,而洛丽塔却试图逃离Humbert疯狂的控制欲。

  Just as everyone had expected, Lolita finally escaped from Humbert with the help of Clare Quilty, who was also an artist but far more psychopathic than Humbert. At last, when Lolita chose her husband instead of Humbert, Humbert gave almost all his money to Lolita and killed Clare Quilty out of anguish and jealousy. His love to Lolita was so strong, that he said:"I loved you. I was a pentapod monster, but I loved you. I was despicable and brutal, and torpid, and everything,..."

  就像所有人猜测的那样,洛丽塔最终在Clare Quilty的帮助下逃离了Humbert。 Clare Quilty也是一个艺术家,但却比Humbert更加心理变态。最后,当洛丽塔选择了她的丈夫而没有选择Humbert的时候,Humbert将他几乎全部的财产都给了洛丽塔,并且由于痛苦和嫉妒杀了Clare Quilty。他对洛丽塔的爱是那样的深沉,他说:“我爱你。我是一个四脚的怪兽但是我爱你。我卑鄙,粗鲁,迟钝,我是一切的罪恶......”

  He felt so guilty about what he had done to Lolita, and that Lolita would never forget about those crimes, however, his love made everyone forgive his crime.

  他对自己对洛丽塔犯下的罪行感到愧疚,而且洛丽塔永远都不会忘记这些罪恶,但是他的爱却让所有读者原谅了他的罪。

  After all:

  The moral sense in mortals is the duty

  We have to pay on mortal sense of beauty.

  毕竟:

  凡人的道德感是一笔税款

  为了致命的美感我们必须交纳

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