MOTIV BOGALjA I NjEGOVE REINTERPRETACIJE OD BEKETOVOG NEIMENLjIVOG DO KOMEDIJE (1953–1963) U SVETLU FORMALNOG NAUKA RASINOVE BERENIKE
Date
2019
Authors
Tešanović, Biljana
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Publisher
University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Philology and Arts
Abstract
The Beckett’s critique accepts that the evolution of his fictional trilogy can be summarized
by the dichotomy ‘motion vs. immobility’, whose three stages – wandering, confinement to
bed and fixity – follow the succession of the trilogy’s imaginary spaces. Malon Dies (1951) is
the end of wandering, The Unnamable (1953) is the ultimate stage of immobilization, with the
legless Mahood sunk to the neck into a decorative pot, and being used as a landmark by the
passers-by. According to Alain Badiou – one of the pioneers of Beckett’s critique renewal in
France in the 1990s – one should not see the tragic pathos of human destiny in this scene but
an orchestration of methodological asceticism which, following Descartes and Husserl’s model,
allows the authors to experiment while isolating one of the humankind’s essential functions:
to go, to be, to say (and the Other, from How It Is (1961) on). The philosopher then divides the
first function into two phases – motion and rest. In this study, we relate this last point to the
infirm figure and its reinterpretation in Beckett’s novels and plays from 1953 to 1963. The
recurrence and variation of this figure serve the exploration of formal possibilities, mostly
based on the opposition made by Badiou between to go and to say, as well as on the radicalization
of Racine’s principles included in Berenice’s preface. The effects of this double motion on
The Unnamable will be expressed by the notorious metatextual observation: “[W]ords, they’re
all I have”. The critics only recently discovered the impact of Berenice on Beckett, following the
publication of the author’s biography by Noulson and according to which, in 1956, Beckett was
already concentrating on the possibilities given by the monologue thanks to this tragedy – a
source of inspiration for the plays Happy Days and Play. We claim that the influence of Berenice
is already decisive in The Unnamable. Even though the influence of Racine on this corpus
has been perceptible for a long time, its importance is only recently being confirmed; which
opens new paths for research.
Description
Keywords
an infirm figure, Beckett, "The Unnamable", "Endgame", "Happy Days", "Play", "Racine’s Berenice", Proust