No Author Better Served

No Author Better Served
Author: Samuel Beckett,Alan Schneider
Publsiher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 522
Release: 1998
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0674625226

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Samuel Beckett claimed he couldn't talk about his work, but he proves remarkably forthcoming in these pages, which document the thirty-year working relationship between the playwright and his principal producer in the United States, Alan Schneider. The 500 letters capture the world of theater as well as the personalities of their authors.

Samuel Beckett s Theatre in America

Samuel Beckett s Theatre in America
Author: N. Bianchini
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2015-02-10
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781137439864

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A study of the 30-year collaboration between playwright Samuel Beckett and director Alan Schneider, Bianchini reconstructs their shared American productions between 1956 and 1984. By examining how Beckett was introduced to American audiences, this book leads into a wider historical discussion of American theatre in the mid-to-late 20th century.

Beckett and Aesthetics

Beckett and Aesthetics
Author: Daniel Albright
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2003-12-22
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0521829089

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Beckett and Aesthetics, first published in 2003, examines Samuel Beckett's struggle with the recalcitrance of artistic media, their refusal to yield to his artistic purposes. As a young man Beckett hoped that writing could provide psychic authenticity and true representation of the physical world; instead he found himself immersed in artificialities and self-enclosed word games. Daniel Albright argues that Beckett escaped from this bind through allegories of artistic frustration and through an art of non-representation, estrangement and general failure. He arrived, Albright shows, at some grasp of fact through the most indirect route available. Albright explores Beckett's experimentation with the notion that an artistic medium might itself be made to speak. This powerful and highly original book explores Beckett's own engagement with radio, film, and television, prose and drama as part of an attempt to escape the confines of the aesthetic. Albright's Beckett becomes a sophisticated theorist of the very notion of the aesthetic.

Historicizing Modernists

Historicizing Modernists
Author: Matthew Feldman,Anna Svendsen,Erik Tonning
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 265
Release: 2021-06-17
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781350215061

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Focussing upon both canonical figures such as Woolf, Eliot, Pound, and Stein and emergent themes such as Christian modernism, intermedial modernism, queer Harlem Renaissance, this volume brings together previously unseen materials, from various archives, to bear upon cutting-edge interpretation of modernism. It provides an overview of approaches to modernism via the employment of various types of primary source material: correspondence, manuscripts and drafts, memoirs and production notes, reading notes and marginalia, and all manner of useful contextualising sources like news reports or judicial records. While having much to say to literary criticism more broadly, this volume is closely focused upon key modernist figures and emergent themes in light of the discipline's 'archival turn' – termed in a unifying introduction 'achivalism'. An essential ingredient separating the above, recent tendency from a much older and better-established new historicism, in modernist studies at least, is that 'the literary canon' remains an important starting point. Whereas new historicism 'is interested in history as represented and recorded in written documents' and tends toward a 'parallel study of literature and non-literary texts', archival criticism tends toward recognised, oftentimes canonical or critically-lauded, writers, presented in Part 1. Sidestepping the vicissitudes of canon formation, manuscript scholars tend to gravitate toward leading modernist authors: James Joyce, Ezra Pound, Virginia Woolf, Gertrude Stein, T.S. Eliot and Samuel Beckett. Part of the reason is obvious: known authors frequently leave behind sizeable literary estates, which are then acquired by research centres. A second section then applies the same empirical methodology to key or emergent themes in the study of modernism, including queer modernism; spatial modernism; little magazines (and online finding aids structuring them); and the role of faith and/or emotions in the construction of 'modernism' as we know it.

Images of Beckett

Images of Beckett
Author: James Knowlson
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 188
Release: 2003-09-11
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0521822580

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Essays by Beckett's biographer and friend and hitherto unknown photographs by one of the leading theatre photographers in the field.

Beckett Critical Reader

Beckett Critical Reader
Author: S.E. Gontarski
Publsiher: Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2019-07-30
Genre: LITERARY CRITICISM
ISBN: 9781474468558

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The Reader makes readily available for the first time 17 major, previously uncollected significant essays from the Journal of Beckett Studies from 1992 to the present.

A Taste for the Negative

A Taste for the Negative
Author: Shane Weller
Publsiher: MHRA
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2005
Genre: Nihilism (Philosophy) in literature
ISBN: 9781904713081

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This study examines the relationship between Samuel Beckett and nihilism.

Modernism at the Beach

Modernism at the Beach
Author: Hannah Freed-Thall
Publsiher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 170
Release: 2023-03-07
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780231551977

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At the beach, bodies converge with the elements and strange treasures come to light. Departing from the conventional association of modernism with the city, this book makes a case for the coastal zone as a surprisingly generative setting for twentieth-century literature and art. An unruly and elusive confluence of human and more-than-human forces, the seashore is also a space of performance—a stage for loosely scripted, improvisatory forms of embodiment and togetherness. The beach, Hannah Freed-Thall argues, was to the modernist imagination what mountains were to Romanticism: a space not merely of anthropogenic conquest but of vital elemental and creaturely connection. With an eye to the peripheries of capitalist leisure, Freed-Thall recasts familiar seaside practices—including tide-pooling, beachcombing, gambling, and sunbathing—as radical experiments in perception and sociability. Close readings of works by Marcel Proust, Virginia Woolf, Claude McKay, Samuel Beckett, Rachel Carson, and Gordon Matta-Clark, among others, explore the modernist beach as a queer refuge, a precarious commons, a scene of collective exhaustion and endurance, and a visionary threshold at the end of the world. Interweaving environmental humanities, queer and feminist theory, and cultural history, Modernism at the Beach offers new ways of understanding twentieth-century literature and its relation to ecological thought.