Beckett the Shape Changer

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Barbara Hardy
Beckett Criticism
Beckett's art
Beckett's bilingualism
Beckett's Career
Beckett's Characters
Beckett's drama
Beckett's Humour
Beckett's Interest
Beckett's Novels
Beckett's proteanism
Beckett's Theatre
Beckett's Work
Beckettian landscape
Beckett’s Career
Beckett’s Characters
Beckett’s Humour
Beckett’s Interest
Beckett’s Novels
Beckett’s Theatre
Beckett’s Work
bilingual literary studies
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Catherine Wheel
comparative study of Beckett's texts
Dense
dramatic form analysis
En Attendant Godot
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Existentialism
Fin De Partie
Follow
Free Hand
humour in fiction
Ideal Core
Irish playwrights
Jack MacGowran
John Stone
Latent Consciousness
Malone Dies
Merry Widow
modernist literature
Modernist plays
Modernist theatre
Mr Endon
narrative experimentation
Playing Back
radio play criticism
Theatre staging
Timeless
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367747695
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 19 May 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The essays in this book, first published in 1975, suggest how best to approach Beckett, how to read him, how to get closer to the concrete experience offered by this most concrete of writers. It aims to bring out the full diversity of Beckett’s art as dramatist and story-teller. His astonishing flexibility and inventiveness is stressed throughout, either in studies of single novels, or from the whole range of the fiction and stage drama, or from the experiments in other media: the solitary film, the radio plays. Beckett’s bilingualism, one of the strangest aspects of his Proteanism, is examined through a comparison of the French and English texts of some of his stage plays. The emphasis of the essays is literary rather than philosophical: they explore narrative and dramatic processes, the strange partial transitions between them, the fine relations of form and feeling which Beckett aims at through whatever medium he is using, and his humaneness, expressed through the many nuances of his humour. The shorter fiction and the later writings also receive close attention.

Katharine Worth