2016
DOI: 10.1080/09670882.2016.1257971
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Samuel Beckett and the fantasy of lithic preservation

Abstract: Across his novels and shorter texts, Beckett engages frequently with forms of preservation fantasy: the belief that engraved language can extend an individual's life beyond the biological limits of the body. I argue that Beckett uses the inscription of proper names to reimagine textual immortality as an inherently material desire. Vital to this inquiry is Michel Serres's allotropic distinction between the hard and the soft [le dur et le doux], anticipated in Molloy. While the epitaphic tradition relies upon ha… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…(U 13.1256-7). In thinking that the message might endure, Bloom invokes the lyric tradition of preservation fantasy, what Stephen calls "the spiritual-heroic refrigerating apparatus"-a tradition that Samuel Beckett will insert himself into and ultimately upend (Joyce 1964, p. 84;Dukes 2017). By writing a message for Gerty on the strand, Bloom assumes the position of Edmund Spenser's name-writer from "Amoretti LXXV," who contrasts writing on a "strand" with a more permanent form of nominal preservation.…”
Section: Nonhuman Signaturesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(U 13.1256-7). In thinking that the message might endure, Bloom invokes the lyric tradition of preservation fantasy, what Stephen calls "the spiritual-heroic refrigerating apparatus"-a tradition that Samuel Beckett will insert himself into and ultimately upend (Joyce 1964, p. 84;Dukes 2017). By writing a message for Gerty on the strand, Bloom assumes the position of Edmund Spenser's name-writer from "Amoretti LXXV," who contrasts writing on a "strand" with a more permanent form of nominal preservation.…”
Section: Nonhuman Signaturesmentioning
confidence: 99%