Beckett and Nature, Kartoniert / Broschiert
Beckett and Nature
You can order the title now. It will be dispatched to you as soon as it is available.
- Publisher:
- Charles Clements, Eleanor Green, James Martell
- Publisher:
- Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 02/2027
- Binding:
- Kartoniert / Broschiert
- Language:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9798765125403
- Item number:
- 12720759
- Volume:
- 288 Pages
- Weight:
- 454 g
- Format:
- 229 x 152 mm
- Thickness:
- 25 mm
- Release date:
- 18.2.2027
- Note
-
Caution: Product is not in German language
Other releases of Beckett and Nature |
Price |
|---|---|
| Buch, Gebunden, Englisch | EUR 156.61* |
Blurb
New analyses on the insightful ways in which Beckett's work actively engages with contested notions of Nature and the natural, developing a radical version of modernism's main questions and insights.
Beckett and Nature takes its cue from contemporary developments in Beckett scholarship focused on ecocriticism, posthumanism, and the Anthropocene, going beyond them into a questioning of the very concepts of "Nature" and "the natural." It examines one of the most unthought ontological dimensions of literature and life: that symbolic space, deemed natural or part of Nature, appears necessary and undeniable and, therefore, impossible to be deconstructed. In doing so, the authors show that, in fact, this space takes on many shapes, recognizing three "natural" dimensions criticized by Beckett: bodies, worlds, and literatures.
Featuring a wide range of both Beckett's work and Beckett scholars - including Jean-Michel Rabaté and Stanley E. Gontarski - Beckett and Natureoffers contextualized readings of the understandings of nature and the natural throughout his decade-spanning ouvre. The volume shows that part of the radicality of Beckett's writing is that - through a variety of evolving techniques and strategies - it questions what appears in our cultures as the most unquestionable and opens up possibilities for thinking not only what is human, literature, and philosophy, but also gender, identity, and any attempt at definitions of ourselves or the world at large.