Posthuman Space in Samuel Beckett's Short Prose

Jonathan Boulter author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:3rd Nov '20

Should be back in stock very soon

Posthuman Space in Samuel Beckett's Short Prose cover

A reading of the philosophical idea of world as it relates to the posthuman subject in Beckett’s short prose Jonathan Boulter offers the reader a way of understanding Beckett’s presentation of the human, more precisely, posthuman, subject in his short prose. These texts are notoriously difficult yet utterly compelling. This compelling difficulty arises from Beckett’s radical dismantling of the idea of the human. His short texts offer instead an image of a being who may be posthumous, or ultimately beyond categories of life and death. And yet, despite this dismantling, the narrators of these texts still find themselves placed within material, recognisable, spaces. This book explores what the idea of ‘world’ can mean to a subject who appears to have moved into a material, even ecological, space that is beyond categories of life and death, being and world. Key Features: Provides a philosophical reading of Samuel BeckettRethinks Beckett in relation to the posthumanContributes to a relatively ignored aspect of Samuel Beckett's writing, the short prose

Boulter’s compelling book shows that one needs Heidegger and Blanchot as well as Hayles and Haraway to make sense of the textual strategies deployed by Beckett when he creates a spectral subjectivity after the decomposition of the subject. Beckett’s shorter texts, powerfully and systematically read with Blanchot and Heidegger, usher in a post-humanism whose positive yield is a new ecology of space, a space without subjective positioning, a space carved out by relentless fables of destitution, homelessness and powerlessness, just to show what remains after one has lost the world. * Jean-Michel Rabaté, University of Pennsylvania, American Academy of Arts and Sciences *

ISBN: 9781474430265

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 357g

232 pages