Samuel Beckett's Critical Aesthetics, 1st ed. 2018

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Language: English
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Samuel Beckett's Critical Aesthetics
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Approximative price 105.49 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Samuel Beckett's Critical Aesthetics
Publication date:
Support: Print on demand
This book considers how Samuel Beckett?s critical essays, dialogues and reflections drew together longstanding philosophical discourses about the nature of representation, and fostered crucial, yet overlooked, connections between these discourses and his fiction and poetry. It also pays attention to Beckett?s writing for little-magazines in France from the 1930s to the 1950s, before going on to consider how the style of Beckett?s late prose recalls and develops figures and themes in his critical writing. By providing a long-overdue assessment of Beckett?s work as a critic, this study shows how Beckett developed a new aesthetic in knowing dialogue with ideas including phenomenology, Kandinsky?s theories of abstraction, and avant-garde movements such as Surrealism. This book will be illuminating for students and researchers interested not just in Beckett, but in literary modernism, the avant-garde, European visual culture and philosophy.
1. Representation and Resistance: Beckett as Reader and Critic.
2. Beckett’s Aesthetic of Vision: Figuration and Surrealist Influence.
3. Transitions and Abstractions: Periodical Culture and Beckett’s Revisions of the Visual.
4. “This running against the walls of our cage”: Beckett at the Boundary.
Tim Lawrence is Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Humanities Research Centre, University of York, UK. He has articles and reviews published in outlets including the Journal of Beckett Studies and Samuel Beckett Today/Aujourd’hui. His research interests lie in the European avant-garde, phenomenology, and twentieth-century visual culture.

Makes a significant diversion from dominant readings of Beckett, which tend to see little political or social interest behind his philosophical concerns

Offers an important contribution to Beckett studies as well as contemporary debates surrounding representation and the role of vision in twentieth-century literature

Examines the development of Beckett's aesthetics from the 1930s through to the 1970s