Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Beckett and Dialectics
View through CrossRef
For a long time, analysis of the work of Samuel Beckett has been dominated by existentialist and post-structuralist interpretations. This new volume instead raises the question of how to understand Beckett via the dialectics underpinning his work. The different chapters explore how Beckett exposes and challenges essential dialectical concepts such as objectivity, subjectivity, exteriority, interiority, immanence, transcendence, and most crucially: negativity.
With contributions from prominent scholars such as Alain Badiou, Mladen Dolar, and Rebecca Comay, Beckett and Dialectics not only sheds new light on how Beckett investigates the shapes, types, and forms of negation – as in the all-pervasive figures of ‘nothing’, ‘no’, ‘null’, and ‘not’ – but also examines how several phenomena that occur throughout Beckett’s work are structured in their use of negativity. These include the relationships between voice and silence, space and void, movement and stasis, the finite and the infinite and repetition and transformation.
This original analysis lends an important new perspective to Beckett studies, and even more fundamentally, to dialectics itself.
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Title: Beckett and Dialectics
Description:
For a long time, analysis of the work of Samuel Beckett has been dominated by existentialist and post-structuralist interpretations.
This new volume instead raises the question of how to understand Beckett via the dialectics underpinning his work.
The different chapters explore how Beckett exposes and challenges essential dialectical concepts such as objectivity, subjectivity, exteriority, interiority, immanence, transcendence, and most crucially: negativity.
With contributions from prominent scholars such as Alain Badiou, Mladen Dolar, and Rebecca Comay, Beckett and Dialectics not only sheds new light on how Beckett investigates the shapes, types, and forms of negation – as in the all-pervasive figures of ‘nothing’, ‘no’, ‘null’, and ‘not’ – but also examines how several phenomena that occur throughout Beckett’s work are structured in their use of negativity.
These include the relationships between voice and silence, space and void, movement and stasis, the finite and the infinite and repetition and transformation.
This original analysis lends an important new perspective to Beckett studies, and even more fundamentally, to dialectics itself.
Related Results
Samuel Beckett and Music
Samuel Beckett and Music
Abstract
Much has been written about the importance of the viewing eye in Samuel Beckett's writing. Less attention has been paid to the place of sound and musicality...
Epilogue: What the Irish Left – Sean O’casey, Samuel Beckett and Lorraine Hansberry’s the Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window
Epilogue: What the Irish Left – Sean O’casey, Samuel Beckett and Lorraine Hansberry’s the Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window
The epilogue considers the impact of Irish playwrights on an American left that had been decimated by anti-Communist persecution. Just prior to the 1956 New York premiere of Samuel...
Negative Dialectics and Event
Negative Dialectics and Event
History is replete with false and unfulfilled promises, as well as singular acts of courage, resilience, and ingenuity. These episodes have led to significant changes in the way pe...
Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot
Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot
“An impressively complete survey of the play in its cultural, theatrical, historical and political contexts.” — David Bradby, co-editor of Contemporary Theatre Review Samuel Becket...
The Dialectics of Placelessness and Boundedness in Richard Wright’s and Gwendolyn Brooks’s Fictions
The Dialectics of Placelessness and Boundedness in Richard Wright’s and Gwendolyn Brooks’s Fictions
This chapter talks about how Richard Wright and Gwendolyn Brooks, perhaps the two most famous literary figures of the Black Chicago Renaissance, shared a common struggle to discern...
The J. M. Coetzee Archive and the Archive in J. M. Coetzee
The J. M. Coetzee Archive and the Archive in J. M. Coetzee
Coetzee’s archive at the Harry Ransom Center in Austin is a magnet for scholars, and is reshaping ideas about what constitutes this writer’s oeuvre. Jan Wilm’s chapter reads Coetze...

