Control Humbert example essay topic
The second instance of Humbert goes into a mental asylum he manipulates the doctors making them believe false diagnoses. He gets a certain joy from tricking the doctors. Humbert describes the joy:" I discovered there was an endless source of robust enjoyment in trifling with psychiatrists: cunningly leading them on; never letting them see that you know all the tricks of the trade, inventing for them elaborate dreams... teasing them with fake primal scenes... (Nabokov 34) He goes to certain extremes to satisfy his wants. Humbert goes as far as bribing a nurse so he can see that the doctors were misdiagnosing him. This back and forth with the doctors was nothing more than a game for Humber.
This type of control was making him really happy so he decided to stay even longer than he needed to at the insane asylum. "The sport was so excellent, in results in my case so ruddy that I stayed on for a whole month after I was quite well. And then I added another week just for the pleasure of taking on a powerful newcomer". (Nabokov 34) Once he became a young adult Humbert knew that he needed to repress his sexual desires for young nymphets so he married Valeria. When he married Valeria, she was a very young looking polish girl. This way he was able to be with someone that reminded him of nymphets and still able to have a certain sense of security. .".. what really attracted me to Valeria was the imitation she gave of a little girl".
(Nabokov 25) Humbert didn't really love her he was just using her for her young looks. Another instance where Humbert will do anything to get what he wants is when wants to be with Lolita. Charlotte, Lolita's mother writes to Humbert that he either has to leave her house or marry her. He decides to stay knowing that is the only way he can stay close to Lolita. Again Humbert will go to extremes to get what he wants; he tests out sleeping pills on Charlotte so he can have some time with Lolita. After the death of Charlotte he begins to tell people that Lolita is his daughter to make sure that she stays with him.
Humbert tries to keep Lolita happy as if he were courting her. He buys her things while on their trip across the states. Even after the trip he tries to control Lolita by putting her in an all girl school. While Lolita is at school Humbert needed to find ways to satisfy his needs so he goes to the park and stares at little girls. Another way that he tries to do to control Lolita is that he won't allow Lolita to date other boys. Also she is not allowed to do many other things either like do the play for the school.
Lolita has to really convince him that it's ok for her to do it. Once he gets the slightest feeling that Lolita is starting to stray away he starts paying her an allowance. These are actions of a man that is willing to do anything it takes to satisfy himself. Once Humbert loses control and is not able to satisfy his needs he vows to get revenge on the person who has brought him this pain. Nothing else matters to Humbert once he realizes that it was Quilty that took Lolita from him. He becomes a man on a mission to kill Quilty and nothing will stop him.
This proving once again that Humbert can only think of himself and will do anything to get what he wants. After the murder he feels no remorse in fact he feels that he did the world a favor by getting rid of such scum. A reason that he actually goes through with the murder is that he had unfinished work to do. He really wanted to get even with his first wife, Valeria.
When she told him that she was leaving him he wanted to beat her but never had the opportunity to do it because she ran off to the United States. With Quilty he didn't want to make the same mistake he had to finish him off for hurting him. There are many factors that could be involved in why Humbert is the type of person that needs to have it his way. John Locke believed in "clean slate" that is that everyone born starts off on a clean slate. A person develops by the people around him / her and the environment. There are plenty of examples where Humbert's past has affected who he is.
His first sexual experience Humbert is not able to reach climax because he is interrupted. He never is able to finish because Annabel dies. This experience causes Humbert to be interested in only young girls. Edwin Sutherland, an American criminologist states that people imitate what they see growing up when they themselves become older. This is no different for Humbert for him it was culturally acceptable to be with someone a lot younger. Mare E. Clark author of In Search of Human Nature writes, "Mother-infant bonding is the evolutionary basis for the psychological framing of all primate social relations, including both males and females".
(Clark 205) Humbert's mother dies when he is young, so he isn't able to learn social relations from her. He has no mother-like influence, because of this Humbert can not establish good relationships with women. Also any relationship Humbert may have with any women always ends abruptly. His mother, Charlotte, and Annabel die all of a sudden. Valeria his first wife leaves him and so does Lolita.
Humbert can't establish a good relationship with women because he was never able to learn how to. In conclusion, Humbert Humbert is the type of person that is very controlling and whatever he wants he will do anything to get. Manipulation of doctors in the insane asylum is something Humbert does because he thinks its fun. When Humbert needed to take control of his sexual desires he decided to marry a very young looking polish girl named Valeria. Humbert knows that even with his marriage to Valeria his true feelings are those for little girls. That's why he spends time staring at little girls at the park fantasying about them.
Once he lost control Humbert goes to great extremes to get even and his control back. There are many factors on why Humbert is like this and it mostly has to do on how he grew up. All in all Humbert is a very disturbed man who can't seem to learn on how to let go, because of this he must have it his way so he can be happy. Anstey, Peter R. The Philosophy of John Locke: New Perspectives.
New York, NY: Routledge Publications, 2002. Clark, Mary E. In Search of Human Nature. New York, NY: Routledge, 2002. Conn, Christopher Hugh's.
Locke on Essence and Identity. Boston, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers 2003. Sagarin, Edward, and Brien aun, Arnold. Norms and Human Behavior. New York, NY: Praeger 1976..