Andy Wimbush 
Still: Samuel Beckett’s Quietism [EPUB ebook] 

支持

In the 1930s, a young Samuel Beckett confessed to a friend that he had been living his life according to an ‘abject self-referring quietism’. Andy Wimbush argues that ‘quietism’—a philosophical and religious attitude of renunciation and will-lessness—is a key to understanding Beckett’s artistic vision and the development of his career as a fiction writer from his early novels Dream of Fair to Middling Women and Murphy to late short prose texts such as Stirrings Still and Company. Using Beckett’s published and archival material, Still: Samuel Beckett’s Quietism shows how Beckett distilled an understanding of quietism from the work of Arthur Schopenhauer, E.M. Cioran, Thomas à Kempis, Fyodor Dostoevsky, and André Gide, before turning it into an aesthetic that would liberate him from the powerful literary traditions of nineteenth-century realism and early twentieth-century high modernism. Quietism, argues Andy Wimbush, was for Beckett a lifelong preoccupation that shaped his perspectives on art, relationships, ethics, and even notions of salvation. But most of all it showed Beckett a way to renounce authorial power and write from a position of impotence, ignorance, and incoherence so as to produce a new kind of fiction that had, in Molloy’s words, the ‘tranquility of decomposition’.

€26.99
支付方式

关于作者

Andy Wimbush teaches twentieth-century and contemporary literature at the Institute of Continuing Education, University of Cambridge. He is the author of several articles on Samuel Beckett’s work and its relationship to religion, philosophy, ecology, modernism, and aesthetics in The Journal of Beckett Studies, Literature and Theology, and various academic books.

购买此电子书可免费获赠一本!
语言 英语 ● 格式 EPUB ● 网页 272 ● ISBN 9783838273693 ● 文件大小 3.8 MB ● 出版者 ibidem ● 发布时间 2020 ● 下载 24 个月 ● 货币 EUR ● ID 7472718 ● 复制保护 社会DRM

来自同一作者的更多电子书 / 编辑

1,575 此类电子书