Präsentiert durch Paradigm Publishing Services
Edinburgh University Press
Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert
Erfordert eine Authentifizierung
24. Beckett and Philosophy
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- Introduction: Towards a Minoritarian Criticism – The Questions We Ask 1
-
Part 1: Art and Aesthetics
- 1. ‘Deux Besoins’: Samuel Beckett and the Aesthetic Dilemma 17
- 2. ‘Siege Laid Again’: Arikha’s Gaze, Beckett’s Painted Stage 25
- 3. Convulsive Aesthetics: Beckett, Chaplin and Charcot 44
- 4. Pain Degree Zero 54
-
Part 2: Fictions
- 5. Sexual Indifference in the Three Novels 67
- 6. A Neuropolitics of Subjectivity in Samuel Beckett’s Three Novels 78
- 7. Evening, Night and Other Shades of Dark: Beckett’s Short Prose 89
-
Part 3: A European Context
- 8. French Beckett and French Literary Politics 1945–52 103
- 9. Beckett/Sade: texts for nothing 117
- 10. Beckett’s Masson: From Abstraction to Non-Relation 131
- 11. Beckett, Duthuit and Ongoing Dialo 146
- 12. Gloria SMH and Beckett’s Linguistic Encryptions 153
- 13. ‘I am writing a manifesto because I have nothing to say’ (Soupault): Samuel Beckett and the Interwar Avant-Garde 170
- 14. Beckett and Contemporary French Literature 185
-
Part 4: An Irish Context
- 15. The ‘Irish’ Translation of Samuel Beckett’s En Attendant Godot 199
- 16. Odds, Ends, Beginnings: Samuel Beckett and Theatre Cultures in 209
- 17. ‘Bid Us Sigh On from Day to Day’: Beckett and the Irish Big House 222
-
Part 5: Film, Radio and Television
- 18. A Womb with a View: Film as Regression Fantasy 237
- 19. ‘The Sound Is Enough’: Beckett’s Radio Plays 251
-
Part 6: Language/Writing
- 20. ‘Was That a Point?’: Beckett’s Punctuation 269
- 21. Beckett’s Unpublished Canon 282
- 22. Textual Scars: Beckett, Genetic Criticism and Textual Scholarship 306
- 23. Beckett’s Ill Seen Ill Said: Reading the Subject, Subject to Reading 320
-
Part 7: Philosophies
- 24. Beckett and Philosophy 333
- 25. ‘Ruse a by’: Watt, the Rupture of the Everyday and Transcendental 345
- 26. Beckett, Modernism and Christianity 353
-
Part 8: Theatre and Performance
- 27. ‘Oh Lovely Art’: Beckett and Music 373
- 28. Victimised Actors and Despotic Directors: Clichés of Theatre at Stake 386
- 29. Staging the Modernist Monologue as Capable Negativity: Beckett’s ‘A Piece of Monologue’ Between and Beyond Eliot and Joyce 397
- 30. Designing Beckett: Jocelyn Herbert’s Contribution to Samuel Beckett’s Theatrical Aesthetics 409
- 31. Dianoetic Laughter in Tragedy: Accepting Finitude – Beckett’s Endgame 423
- 32. Performing the Formless 433
-
Part 9: Global Beckett
- 33. ‘Facing Other Windows’: Beckett in Brazil 445
- 34. Beckett in Belgrade 453
- 35. ‘Struggling With a Dead Language’: Language of Others in All That Fall and the Japanese Avant-Garde Theatre in the 1960s 465
- Contributors 477
- Index 485
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- Introduction: Towards a Minoritarian Criticism – The Questions We Ask 1
-
Part 1: Art and Aesthetics
- 1. ‘Deux Besoins’: Samuel Beckett and the Aesthetic Dilemma 17
- 2. ‘Siege Laid Again’: Arikha’s Gaze, Beckett’s Painted Stage 25
- 3. Convulsive Aesthetics: Beckett, Chaplin and Charcot 44
- 4. Pain Degree Zero 54
-
Part 2: Fictions
- 5. Sexual Indifference in the Three Novels 67
- 6. A Neuropolitics of Subjectivity in Samuel Beckett’s Three Novels 78
- 7. Evening, Night and Other Shades of Dark: Beckett’s Short Prose 89
-
Part 3: A European Context
- 8. French Beckett and French Literary Politics 1945–52 103
- 9. Beckett/Sade: texts for nothing 117
- 10. Beckett’s Masson: From Abstraction to Non-Relation 131
- 11. Beckett, Duthuit and Ongoing Dialo 146
- 12. Gloria SMH and Beckett’s Linguistic Encryptions 153
- 13. ‘I am writing a manifesto because I have nothing to say’ (Soupault): Samuel Beckett and the Interwar Avant-Garde 170
- 14. Beckett and Contemporary French Literature 185
-
Part 4: An Irish Context
- 15. The ‘Irish’ Translation of Samuel Beckett’s En Attendant Godot 199
- 16. Odds, Ends, Beginnings: Samuel Beckett and Theatre Cultures in 209
- 17. ‘Bid Us Sigh On from Day to Day’: Beckett and the Irish Big House 222
-
Part 5: Film, Radio and Television
- 18. A Womb with a View: Film as Regression Fantasy 237
- 19. ‘The Sound Is Enough’: Beckett’s Radio Plays 251
-
Part 6: Language/Writing
- 20. ‘Was That a Point?’: Beckett’s Punctuation 269
- 21. Beckett’s Unpublished Canon 282
- 22. Textual Scars: Beckett, Genetic Criticism and Textual Scholarship 306
- 23. Beckett’s Ill Seen Ill Said: Reading the Subject, Subject to Reading 320
-
Part 7: Philosophies
- 24. Beckett and Philosophy 333
- 25. ‘Ruse a by’: Watt, the Rupture of the Everyday and Transcendental 345
- 26. Beckett, Modernism and Christianity 353
-
Part 8: Theatre and Performance
- 27. ‘Oh Lovely Art’: Beckett and Music 373
- 28. Victimised Actors and Despotic Directors: Clichés of Theatre at Stake 386
- 29. Staging the Modernist Monologue as Capable Negativity: Beckett’s ‘A Piece of Monologue’ Between and Beyond Eliot and Joyce 397
- 30. Designing Beckett: Jocelyn Herbert’s Contribution to Samuel Beckett’s Theatrical Aesthetics 409
- 31. Dianoetic Laughter in Tragedy: Accepting Finitude – Beckett’s Endgame 423
- 32. Performing the Formless 433
-
Part 9: Global Beckett
- 33. ‘Facing Other Windows’: Beckett in Brazil 445
- 34. Beckett in Belgrade 453
- 35. ‘Struggling With a Dead Language’: Language of Others in All That Fall and the Japanese Avant-Garde Theatre in the 1960s 465
- Contributors 477
- Index 485