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Since Beckett

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 19:55 authored by Peter Boxall
Throughout the first four decades of Samuel Beckett's reception, his writing was widely understood as an extended performance of exhaustion. He was seen as a writer in whose work the possibilities of the modernist project finally withered and dried up. He was the apolitical, nihilistic writer par excellence, a writer for whom everything is already finished, for whom there is nothing more to be done. In more recent years, however, this sense of Beckettian finality has entered into a contradiction with an opposite sense of Beckettian persistence. For a number of contemporary writers, Beckett is not an end point or a last gasp, but a well spring from which a entire range of new aesthetic possibilities emerges. This essay explores this contradiction, and asks what it means to inherit Beckett's legacy, a legacy which delivers us, in Moran's phrase, to an 'atmosphere' of 'finality without end'.

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

Textual Practice

ISSN

0950-236X

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Issue

2

Volume

20

Page range

301-317

Pages

18.0

Department affiliated with

  • English Publications

Full text available

  • No

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2012-02-06

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