Beckett's Creatures

Beckett's Creatures
Title Beckett's Creatures PDF eBook
Author Joseph Anderton
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 267
Release 2016-05-05
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 1474234542

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In the shadow of the Holocaust, Samuel Beckett captures humanity in ruins through his debased beings and a decomposing mode of writing that strives to 'fail better'. But what might it mean to be a 'creature' or 'creaturely' in Beckett's world? In the first full-length study of the concept of the creature in Beckett's prose and drama, this book traces the suspended lives and melancholic existences of Beckett's ignorant and impotent creatures to assess the extent to which political value marks the divide between human and inhuman. Through close readings of Beckett's prose and drama, particularly texts from the middle period, including Molloy, Malone Dies, The Unnamable, Waiting for Godot and Endgame, Anderton explicates four arenas of creaturely life in Beckett. Each chapter attends to a particular theme – testimony, power, humour and survival – to analyse a range of pressures and impositions that precipitate the creaturely state of suspension. Drawing on the writings of Adorno, Agamben, Benjamin, Deleuze and Derrida to explore the overlaps between artistic and political structures of creation, the creature emerges as an in-between figure that bespeaks the provisional nature of the human. The result is a provocative examination of the indirect relationship between art and history through Beckett's treatment of testimony, power, humour and survival, which each attest to the destabilisation of meaning after Auschwitz.

Beckett and Animals

Beckett and Animals
Title Beckett and Animals PDF eBook
Author Mary Bryden
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 247
Release 2013-07-15
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1107019605

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This is the first full-length study to explore the significance of animals in Samuel Beckett's prose, drama, and poetry. Bringing together an international array of Beckett specialists, the collection theorizes a broad spectrum of animal manifestations while focusing on the roles that distinct animal forms play within Beckett's work.

Beckett’s Late Stage

Beckett’s Late Stage
Title Beckett’s Late Stage PDF eBook
Author Rhys Tranter
Publisher BoD – Books on Demand
Pages 248
Release 2018-02-28
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 3838210352

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Beckett’s Late Stage reexamines the Nobel laureate’s post-war prose and drama in the light of contemporary trauma theory. Through a series of sustained close-readings, the study demonstrates how the comings and goings of Beckett’s prose unsettles the Western philosophical tradition; it reveals how Beckett’s live theatrical productions are haunted by the rehearsal of traumatic repetition, and asks what his ghostly radio recordings might signal for twentieth-century modernity. Drawing from psychoanalytic and poststructuralist traditions, Beckett’s Late Stage explores how the traumatic symptom allows us to rethink the relationship between language, meaning, and identity after 1945.

Beckett’s Voices / Voicing Beckett

Beckett’s Voices / Voicing Beckett
Title Beckett’s Voices / Voicing Beckett PDF eBook
Author
Publisher BRILL
Pages 361
Release 2021-08-16
Genre Drama
ISBN 9004468382

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Beckett’s Voices / Voicing Beckett uses ‘voice’ as a prism to investigate Samuel Beckett’s work across a range of texts, genres, and cultures. Twenty-one international contributors evaluate Beckett’s contemporary artistic legacy in relation to music, media, performance, and philosophy.

Beckett and Nothing

Beckett and Nothing
Title Beckett and Nothing PDF eBook
Author Daniela Caselli
Publisher Manchester University Press
Pages 292
Release 2020-03-09
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1526146452

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This electronic version has been made available under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-ND) open access license. Beckett and nothing invites its readership to understand the complex ways in which the Beckett canon both suggests and resists turning nothing into something by looking at specific, sometimes almost invisible ways in which ‘little nothings’ pervade the Beckett canon. The volume has two main functions: on the one hand, it looks at ‘nothing’ not only as a content but also a set of rhetorical strategies to reconsider afresh classic Beckett problems such as Irishness, silence, value, marginality, politics and the relationships between modernism and postmodernism and absence and presence. On the other, it focuses on ‘nothing’ in order to assess how the Beckett oeuvre can help us rethink contemporary preoccupations with materialism, neurology, sculpture, music and television. The volume is a scholarly intervention in the fields of Beckett studies which offers its chapters as case studies to use in the classroom. It will prove of interest to advanced students and scholars in English, French, Comparative Literature, Drama, Visual Studies, Philosophy, Music, Cinema and TV studies.

Raymond Federman and Samuel Beckett

Raymond Federman and Samuel Beckett
Title Raymond Federman and Samuel Beckett PDF eBook
Author Nathalie Camerlynck
Publisher Anthem Press
Pages 213
Release 2021-07-13
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1785277979

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This book is about Raymond Federman and his incredible textual obsession with Samuel Beckett. Federman was a scholar of Beckett, postmodern theorist, a self-translator and avant-garde novelist. Born in Paris in 1928, all of his immediate family perished in the Holocaust. Federman escaped thanks to his mother, who hid him in a closet. After the war, he migrated to America and devoted his life to scholarship and creative writing. In both, he devoted his life to Beckett. Federman’s creative and theoretical writings contaminate and pervert each other just as, in his novels, French contaminates English and fiction perverts reality. His work is centered on the details of his survival, enacting a perpetual return to the closet, as previous studies have demonstrated. By examining Beckettian (and by extension Joycean) intertextuality in the novels of Raymond Federman, this study traces the contours of a second closet.

Beckett, Modernism and the Material Imagination

Beckett, Modernism and the Material Imagination
Title Beckett, Modernism and the Material Imagination PDF eBook
Author Steven Connor
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 225
Release 2014-06-30
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1139993119

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Steven Connor, one of the most influential critics of twentieth-century literature and culture, has spent much of his career writing and thinking about Samuel Beckett. This book presents Connor's finest published work on Beckett alongside fresh essays that explore how Beckett has shaped major themes in modernism and twentieth-century literature. Through discussions of sport, nausea, slowness, flies, the radio switch, religion and academic life, Connor shows how Beckett's writing is characteristic of a distinctively mundane or worldly modernism, arguing that it is well-attuned to our current concern with the stressed relations between the human and natural worlds. Through Connor's analysis, Beckett's prose, poetry and dramatic works animate a modernism profoundly concerned with life, worldly existence and the idea of the world as such. Lucid, provocative, wide-ranging, and richly informed by critical and cultural theory, this book is required reading for anyone teaching or studying Beckett, modernism and twentieth-century literary studies.