Nabokov's most explicit expression of his lifelong fascination with games is his December 1925 essay, "Breitensträter – Paolino," which begins with the claim that "Everything in the world plays." In the same month, however, he published a short story, "A Guide to Berlin," whose central section is entitled "Work." In these two pieces Nabokov explores competing visions of life and art as play and as work, which he had found discussed in an essay of 1922, "Praise of Idleness," by his early mentor Iulii Aikhenval'd. The vision of play goes back to Friedrich Schiller, that of work to Marx, Tolstoy, and other nineteenth century writers. Each entails a profoundly different style, ideology, and set of assumptions about the mind. We cannot identify Nabokov exclusively with either vision.
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