Journal of Beckett Studies, Ausgaben 6-8J. Calder ; Atlantic Highlands [N.J.] Humanities Press, 1980 |
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Seite 51
... novel has little interest in any traditional , i.e. mimetic obligations . The narrator , late in the novel , makes this explicit : ' For since when were Watt's concerns with what things were , in reality ? ' ( p.227 ) . A street , a ...
... novel has little interest in any traditional , i.e. mimetic obligations . The narrator , late in the novel , makes this explicit : ' For since when were Watt's concerns with what things were , in reality ? ' ( p.227 ) . A street , a ...
Seite 52
... novel's illusion of life rests ) a transcription of every variable and every possibility that is available to a given character in a given situation . In a frustrat- ingly limited but nevertheless logical sense , the reader is supplied ...
... novel's illusion of life rests ) a transcription of every variable and every possibility that is available to a given character in a given situation . In a frustrat- ingly limited but nevertheless logical sense , the reader is supplied ...
Seite 53
... novel consistently flirts with an infinite regress of closed system of logic upon closed system of logic . In terms of narrative everything that ' happens ' occurs as if in slow motion , anchored by tireless feats of analysis through ...
... novel consistently flirts with an infinite regress of closed system of logic upon closed system of logic . In terms of narrative everything that ' happens ' occurs as if in slow motion , anchored by tireless feats of analysis through ...
Inhalt
Editorial John Pilling | 5 |
The French Murphy from rare bird to cancre Anthony Jones | 37 |
Beckett Valéry and Watt Ross Posnock | 51 |
Urheberrecht | |
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animals appears artist attempt audience Beckett Studies Beckettian becomes bicycle body Boyars Burroughs characters Clov consciousness created creative critical dark described Didi drama dream Embers Endgame English Estragon existence experience expression eyes fiction Film finally Finnegans wake French Ghost trio Godot Gogo Grove Press Henry Henry's Holloway human Imagination dead imagine James Joyce John Calder Journal of Beckett Joyce Krapp Krapp's last tape language light London Malone Malone dies means memory Mercier and Camier mind Molloy Molloy's Moran movement Murphy Murphy's narrative narrator nature never novel object Pause perceived perception perhaps play possible present pricks than kicks protagonist Proust quincunx reader reality reference rotunda Samuel Beckett scene seems sense sentence sound space speak stage Stoppard story strange suggests T.S. Eliot theatre thing Tom Stoppard University unnamable Valéry vision voice Waiting for Godot Watt words writing