Trapped in Thought: A Study of the Beckettian MentalitySyracuse University Press, 17.04.2007 - 260 Seiten Eric P. Levy’s book investigates the mentality or attitude of cognitive apprehension expressed in Beckettian texts. Primary areas of concern include how the Beckettian attitude began, what concepts it invents or transforms to sustain its mode of thought, how the mentality wards off factors which would refute or heal it, and, most paradoxical of all, why this mentality ultimately reduces the mind to an estranged source of thought, continuously repudiated by its own awareness. The study uncovers the strategies by which experience is evacuated of all content but that consistent with the attitude registering it. |
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Seite 198
... universal : " The more universal- ity , the more Reality " ( 1958 , 1 : 292 ) . Universality pertains to range of predictability . Alfred North Whitehead explains : " The notion of a universal is of that which can enter into the ...
... universal : " The more universal- ity , the more Reality " ( 1958 , 1 : 292 ) . Universality pertains to range of predictability . Alfred North Whitehead explains : " The notion of a universal is of that which can enter into the ...
Seite 199
... universal than itself ( 1971 , 37 ) . Here , absence of content is the reciprocal of universal presence ( or extension ) of form . Like medieval realism , Beckettian mimesis also associates diminishing content with increas- ing ...
... universal than itself ( 1971 , 37 ) . Here , absence of content is the reciprocal of universal presence ( or extension ) of form . Like medieval realism , Beckettian mimesis also associates diminishing content with increas- ing ...
Seite 209
... universal : " [ W ] hatever I say , it will always as it were be the same thing " ( MOL , 45-46 ) . Indeed , this emphasis on the abstract universal or form is foregrounded in Molloy's account of his own cognition : " I saw the world ...
... universal : " [ W ] hatever I say , it will always as it were be the same thing " ( MOL , 45-46 ) . Indeed , this emphasis on the abstract universal or form is foregrounded in Molloy's account of his own cognition : " I saw the world ...
Inhalt
The Beckettian Mimesis of Pain | 20 |
The Beckettian Mimesis of Seeing Nothing | 36 |
The Beckettian Mimesis of Absence | 49 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
absence abstraction according achieve awareness Beckettian art Beckettian mimesis Beckettian universe Berkeley Berkeley's Bollingen Cartesian clarify Clov cogito concerns consciousness construed context critics defined dialogue edited Edith Hamilton emphasis emptiness Endgame entails epitomized example existence experience expression formulated futility Gilson Grove Press habit Hamm Hamm's Hence human idea identity individual inexistence interpretation introspection invokes kenosis Knowlson Krapp Krapp's Last Tape living Lucky Lucky's Malone Malone Dies Malone's meaning mentality Mercier and Camier Metaphysics mimesis of pain mind mode Molloy moral Moran narrator never notion novel object Ohio Impromptu paradox passage Phenomenology philosophical phrase Plato play Pozzo predicament principle Proust purpose reality reference relation repudiates Samuel Beckett selfhood Series 71 species suffering Summa Theologica T]he Texts thing thought tion translated by Samuel Uhlmann ultimately understand Univ Unnamable Unnamable's Vladimir and Estragon voice Waiting for Godot Watt Whereas words York