“…113 Despite his narrow periodization of late modernism as the late 1920s to the 1930s, Tyrus Miller recognises the important point that 'in such works the vectors of despair and utopia, the compulsion to decline and the impulse to renewal, are not just related; they are practically indistinguishable'. 114 Late modernism therefore formalises the abortive but enduring kernel that exists within the spirit of modernism; it enacts the chronic belatedness and persistence endemic to its oppositional, experimental forbearer. Kafka and Beckett invoke and perform this sense of protracted failure present in their own supposed modernist artistic sensibility to expose the burdensome, atrophied side of its dynamism.…”