Samuel Beckett (Writers and Their Work)

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Samuel Beckett (Writers and Their Work)

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 56 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780582012363
  • DDC分類 828.91209

Full Description

A well-known English author has told the story of how he discovered one
of Beckett's early novels in a London public library. He appropriated the copy
because the date-stamp revealed that it had only been borrowed once in the
fifteen years following its publication. Samuel Beckett, who was awarded the
Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969, has remained for most of his career a
difficult an avant-garde writer; but like
his compatriot, James Joyce, he has wielded a more potent literary influence than
many authors who command a far wider public.

                The discoveries of
modern science and mathematics have intensified the human awareness of the
infinite and Beckett himself is peculiarly sensitive to the idea that man is 'a
scrap of life surrounded by death, a something that encircled by nothing'. Both
his novels and his plays have a predominantly philosophical bent: their aim is
a search for the nature of reality rather than the construction of plausible
fictions. Beckett is much concerned with the difficulties of human
communication and with man's doom of solitude, and he expresses these
preoccupations through a symbolism of blindness, of immobility, of an existence
stripped down to the bare essentials of nutrition and excretion: these images
which he has made familiar through his plays convey a sense of dereliction
which is undoubtedly attuned to the spirit of the post-war world. Yet at the
same time he possesses the peculiarly Irish faculty for giving this desolate
vision a comic dimension.

    Professor Mayoux's essay traces Beckett's
literary development from his early poems through the novels to his plays for
the theatre and the radio, and finally to the short, rigorously compressed
fables or visions of the last few years. He notes Beckett's adoption of the
French language for many of his writings, a choice which seems designed to
emphasize the foreign-ness, the externality of all language. Like Ionesco,
Beckett has never become a French writer, but remained an Irishman writing in French.

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