Beckett's Intuitive Spectator
Title | Beckett's Intuitive Spectator PDF eBook |
Author | Michelle Chiang |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 204 |
Release | 2018-07-16 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3319915185 |
Beckett’s Intuitive Spectator: Me to Play investigates how audience discomfort, instead of a side effect of a Beckett pedagogy, is a key spectatorial experience which arises from an everyman intuition of loss. With reference to selected works by Henri Bergson, Immanuel Kant and Gilles Deleuze, this book charts the processes of how an audience member’s habitual way of understanding could be frustrated by Beckett’s film, radio, stage and television plays. Michelle Chiang explores the ways in which Beckett exploited these mediums to reconstitute an audience response derived from intuition.
Beckett’s Imagined Interpreters and the Failures of Modernism
Title | Beckett’s Imagined Interpreters and the Failures of Modernism PDF eBook |
Author | Nick Wolterman |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 211 |
Release | 2022-07-20 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3031056507 |
Samuel Beckett’s work is littered with ironic self-reflexive comments on presumed audience expectations that it should ultimately make explicable sense. An ample store of letters and anecdotes suggests Beckett’s own preoccupation with and resistance to similar interpretive mindsets. Yet until now such concerns have remained the stuff of scholarly footnotes and asides. Beckett’s Imagined Interpreters and the Failures of Modernism addresses these issues head-on and investigates how Beckett’s ideas about who he writes for affect what he writes. What it finds speaks to current understandings not only of Beckett’s techniques and ambitions, but also of modernism’s experiments as fundamentally compromised challenges to enshrined ways of understanding and organizing the social world. Beckett’s uniquely anxious audience-targeting brings out similarly self-doubting strategies in the work of other experimental twentieth-century writers and artists in whom he is interested: his corpus proves emblematic of a modernism that understands its inability to achieve transformative social effects all at once, but that nevertheless judiciously complicates too-neat distinctions drawn within ongoing culture wars. For its re-evaluations of four key points of orientation for understanding Beckett’s artistic ambitions—his arch critical pronouncements, his postwar conflations of value and valuelessness, his often-ambiguous self-commentary, and his sardonic metatheatrical play—as well as for its running dialogue with wider debates around modernism as a social phenomenon, this book is of interest to students and researchers interested in Beckett, modernism, and the relations between modern and contemporary artistic and social developments.
Samuel Beckett’s Legacies in American Fiction
Title | Samuel Beckett’s Legacies in American Fiction PDF eBook |
Author | James Baxter |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 263 |
Release | 2021-11-30 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3030815722 |
Samuel Beckett’s Legacies in American Fiction provides an overdue investigation into Beckett’s rich influences over American writing. Through in-depth readings of postmodern authors such as Robert Coover, Donald Barthelme, Thomas Pynchon, Don DeLillo, Paul Auster and Lydia Davis, this book situates Beckett’s post-war writing of exhaustion and generation in relation to the emergence of an explosive American avant-garde. In turn, this study provides a valuable insight into the practical realities of Beckett’s dissemination in America, following the author’s long-standing relationship with the countercultural magazine Evergreen Review and its dramatic role in redrawing the possibilities of American culture in the 1960s. While Beckett would be largely removed from his American context, this book follows his vigorous, albeit sometimes awkward, reception alongside the authors and institutions central to shaping his legacies in 20th and 21st century America.
Samuel Beckett and the Theatre of the Witness
Title | Samuel Beckett and the Theatre of the Witness PDF eBook |
Author | Hannah Simpson |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 201 |
Release | 2022-06-09 |
Genre | French drama |
ISBN | 0192863266 |
Samuel Beckett and the Theatre of the Witness explores Beckett's representation of physical pain in his theatre plays in the long aftermath of World War II, emphasising how the issues raised by this staging of pain speak directly to matters lying at the heart of his work: the affective power of the human body; the doubtful capacity of language as a means of communication; the aesthetic and ethical functioning of the theatre medium; and the vexed question of intersubjective empathy. Alongside the wartime and post-war plays of fellow Francophone writers Albert Camus, Eugène Ionesco, Pablo Picasso, and Marguerite Duras, this study resituates Beckett's early plays in a new conceptualising of le théâtre du témoin or a 'theatre of the witness'. These are plays concerned with the epistemological and ethical uncertainties of witnessing another's pain, rather than with the sufferer's own direct experience. They raise troubling questions about our capacity to comprehend and respond to another being's pain. Drawing on an interdisciplinary framework of extant criticism, recorded historical audience response, theatre and affect theory, and medical understandings of bodily pain, Hannah Simpson argues that these plays do not offer any easily negotiable encounter with physical suffering, pushing us to recognise the very 'otherness' of another being's pain, even as it invades our own affective sphere. In place of any comforting transcendence or redemption of endured pain, they offer a starkly sceptical, even pessimistic probing of what it is to witness another's suffering.
Samuel Beckett Issue
Title | Samuel Beckett Issue PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 364 |
Release | 2003 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
The Plays of Samuel Beckett
Title | The Plays of Samuel Beckett PDF eBook |
Author | Katherine Weiss |
Publisher | A&C Black |
Pages | 295 |
Release | 2013-01-31 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 140814557X |
The Plays of Samuel Beckett provides a stimulating analysis of Beckett's entire dramatic oeuvre, encompassing his stage, radio and television plays. Ideal for students, this major study combines analysis of each play by Katherine Weiss with interveiws and essays from practitioners and scholars.
Drawing on Beckett
Title | Drawing on Beckett PDF eBook |
Author | Linda Ben-Zvi |
Publisher | |
Pages | 368 |
Release | 2003 |
Genre | |
ISBN |