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Most topics lend themselves
to a variety of introductory gambits. Suppose the assignment is
to write a literary analysis of Vladimir Nabokov's novel Lolita.
Below are several different ways to start that essay. Please note
that not all introductions would be appropriate for one particular
thesis or approach. Knowing some of the possible openings, however,
often helps lead us to insights we didn't know we had.
Begin with a quotation
Although this approach
can be overused, it can be very effective when you have an appropriate
quotation. That quotation may relate directly to the subject or
it may be only indirectly related (and thus require further explanation).
Do not force a quotation into this spot; if an appropriate quotation
is not available, select another method.
"The novel Lolita,"
the critic Charles Blight said in 1959, "is proof that American
civilization is on the verge of total moral collapse" (45). The
judgment of critics and readers in subsequent years, however, has
proclaimed Lolita to be one of the great love stories of
all time and one of the best proofs that American civilization is
still vibrant and alive.
"Lolita, light of my
life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul" (11). These opening lines
of Lolita reveal the essence of Humbert Humbert's complexity
and compulsion, his saving grace and his damning passion.
Begin with a concession
Start with a statement
recognizing an opinion or approach different from the one you plan
to take in your essay.
Many critics
have pointed to the unrelenting word games and puns throughout Lolita
as proof that Vladimir Nabokov's major concern has always been language
and art. Although these subjects certainly loom in all his works,
a close examination of Lolita reveals that morality -- the
way people treat each other -- is just as major a concern for him
as language and art.
Begin with a paradox
In 1959 Vladimir
Nabokov's novel Lolita had been banned in several cities
as pornographic. Today it is required reading not only in literature
courses but also in philosophy courses that explore the nature of
love. Since its publication, the novel's subject has been recognized
to be love, not lust; art, not perversion.
Begin with a short
anecdote or narrative
When the original
movie version of Lolita was released in the early 1960s,
Sue Lyon, the young actress who starred as the provocative "nymphet"
of the title, was judged too young to be allowed to see the movie
in the theater.
Begin with an interesting
fact or statistic
Joseph Conrad
and Vladimir Nabokov -- two acknowledged masters of English prose
-- were not even native speakers of English. Conrad's native tongue
was Polish; Nabokov's, Russian.
Begin with a question
or several questions that will be answered in the paper
How could a
book now acknowledged as a masterpiece not only of fiction but also
of English prose have been banned when it was published? How could
a novel that dealt with love and art be thought of as pornographic?
Why would a society so mindful of free speech as America ban any
book in the first place?
Begin with relevant
background material
Background material should
be presented concisely and should be clearly related to your thesis.
A rambling discussion of material only remotely related to your
main point will confuse and bore your readers.
Although he
was born in Russia and lived for many years in England, Germany,
and France before coming to America in 1941, Vladimir Nabokov is
now considered one of the great American novelists of the 20th century.
This opinion, however, is not based solely on his mastery of English
prose. His novel Lolita has been said to have captured the
essence of American life in the 1950s better than any novel written
by a writer born in this country.
Begin by stating a
long-term effect or effects without immediately stating the cause
It caused howls
of protest from the guardians of public morality in the 1950s. Indirectly
it helped bring about both artistic and personal freedom in the
1960s. Today it is a recognized classic of art and thought -- Vladimir
Nabokov's Lolita.
Begin with an analogy
Like a hurricane
that brings fear and panic along with its powerful winds, uprooting
trees and disrupting belief in an all-merciful God, so the novel
Lolita swept across America in the 1950s, bringing fear and
panic that pedophilia would be loosed on the land. Instead, the
novel, like a hurricane, blew over trees of thought that were not
deeply rooted in American experience, exposing their gnarled premises
while helping to clear the way for the artistic freedom of the 1960s.
Begin with a definition
of a term that is important to your essay
Avoid simple dictionary
definitions. Create an expanded definition that explains how the
term applies to your topic and essay.
Every few years
the ugly charge of "pornography" is aimed at some novel or movie.
Never was the term more inappropriately used than in the case of
Lolita, yet the taint of that word still lingers in the minds
of many when they hear the book's title. What exactly is "pornography"
that it should stir such feelings and be so hated? The problem,
of course, is that no one can agree on what pornography actually
is. That it has something to do with sex seems clear; beyond that,
there is a chaos of opinion. When the small-minded or special-interest
definitions are pushed aside, however, we are left with D.H. Lawrence's
provocative definition: pornography is anything that "does dirt
on sex." By that definition, Lolita is the opposite of pornography
-- it is a celebration of sex and love.
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