Harvard University Press, 2016 Cloth: 978-0-674-50485-1 | eISBN: 978-0-674-49583-8 Library of Congress Classification PR6003.E282Z624755 2016 Dewey Decimal Classification 842.914
ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Readers have long responded to Samuel Beckett’s novels and plays with wonder or bafflement. They portray blind, lame, maimed creatures cracking whips and wielding can openers who are funny when they should be chilling, cruel when they should be tender, warm when most wounded. His works seem less to conclude than to stop dead. And so readers quite naturally ask: what might all this be meant to mean?
In a lively and enlivening study of a singular creative nature, Leland de la Durantaye helps us better understand Beckett’s strangeness and the notorious difficulties it presents. He argues that Beckett’s lifelong campaign was to mismake on purpose—not to denigrate himself, or his audience, nor even to reconnect with the child or the savage within, but because he believed that such mismaking is in the interest of art and will shape its future. Whether called “creative willed mismaking,” “logoclasm,” or “word-storming in the name of beauty,” Beckett meant by these terms an art that attacks language and reason, unity and continuity, art and life, with wit and venom.
Beckett’s Art of Mismaking explains Beckett’s views on language, the relation between work and world, and the interactions between stage and page, as well as the motives guiding his sixty-year-long career—his strange decision to adopt French as his literary language, swerve from the complex novels to the minimalist plays, determination to “fail better,” and principled refusal to follow any easy path to originality.
REVIEWS
Excellent…Where most studies are busy narrowing their focus, Durantaye roams across the Beckett canon, making connections between early and late works, and with other writers too where pertinent…Durantaye deploys theory with a confidence and lightness that are exhilarating without ever becoming flamboyant or flippant…He himself is a wonderfully lucid critic, particularly when it comes to unpicking critical clichés…On questions of characterization, setting and style he is consistently illuminating, and he has, like the finest critics, an ability to ask questions that seem obvious only once they are posed.
-- Dan Gunn Times Literary Supplement
In this lean study, de la Durantaye combines exegesis, biography, and deeply informed critical theorizing to speculate on the meaning and methodology of Samuel Beckett’s famously demanding oeuvre. De la Durantaye’s central thesis is that Beckett’s ‘logoclasm,’ or ‘ruptured writing,’ dismantled the traditional aims of literature in order to uncover what, if anything, lay beneath the language. In dense but artful chapters, de la Durantaye explores how and why this logoclasm manifested in Beckett’s preoccupation with landscapes that evoke estrangement, his Oedipal flight from friend and mentor James Joyce’s style, and the psychopathology of his ‘gallery of moribunds.’ In interpreting Beckett’s aesthetic pessimism in terms of these categories of ‘willed creative mismaking,’ de la Durantaye goes some way toward distinguishing his book from the wealth of available studies on the modernist master. [A] brief but substantial contribution.
-- Publishers Weekly
A fascinating account, both intelligent and irreverent—in the best sense of these words—of Samuel Beckett’s creative chaos, his mismaking ‘by design.’
-- Chris Ackerley, University of Otago
This book feels so different from almost every other book on Beckett. There are many insights, quick excursions, surprising allusions. The reader is a companion, part of a conversation, and the effect is very exciting, a sort of collaborative critical project. An intellectual adventure.
-- Michael Wood, Princeton University
Samuel Beckett’s works continue to intrigue audiences and enthrall critics, yet for many his work remains difficult. In this lively study, La Durantaye addresses this head on and provides a fresh approach for appreciating Beckett’s aesthetic practice…Treating the essential difficulty of Beckett’s art, this volume will prove helpful to those who find
Beckett’s work engaging and those who wish to understand more clearly his guiding artistic motivations.
-- J. S. Baggett Choice
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Note on Sources and Abbreviations
Introduction: The Art of Mismaking
Artistic Character
By No Definition
Is It Difficult?, or On Riddles
Watt?
Word-Storming, or Logoclasm
Hic sunt leones
A Brief Bit of Biography
Balzac, Bathos, Chloroform, Clockwork
The Artifice of Artificiality
Excessive Freedom, or Drama
Playing God, or L’inemmerdable
Artificiality, or The Hatchet Is Mightier Than the Pencil
Chapter 2. The Will to Mismake, or Fish and Chips
M Is for . . .
The Issue, or Fellowship
The Life of the Mind
How Not to Read Philosophy, or Reading Schopenhauer
The Artist’s View
Chapter 3. Nature Painting
Landscape Painting and the Forest of Symbols
Chapter 4. The Alibi of a Foreign Language
In French and on Style
Pour faire remarquer moi, or The Need to Be Ill-Equipped
ReJoyce
Animism
Chapter 5. To Hell with All This Fucking Scenery
Chapter 6. No Symbols Where None Intended
Mud
The Gravity of Symbolism
Allegory
Chapter 7. The Psychopathology of Character Creation, or The Series
Harvard University Press, 2016 Cloth: 978-0-674-50485-1 eISBN: 978-0-674-49583-8
Readers have long responded to Samuel Beckett’s novels and plays with wonder or bafflement. They portray blind, lame, maimed creatures cracking whips and wielding can openers who are funny when they should be chilling, cruel when they should be tender, warm when most wounded. His works seem less to conclude than to stop dead. And so readers quite naturally ask: what might all this be meant to mean?
In a lively and enlivening study of a singular creative nature, Leland de la Durantaye helps us better understand Beckett’s strangeness and the notorious difficulties it presents. He argues that Beckett’s lifelong campaign was to mismake on purpose—not to denigrate himself, or his audience, nor even to reconnect with the child or the savage within, but because he believed that such mismaking is in the interest of art and will shape its future. Whether called “creative willed mismaking,” “logoclasm,” or “word-storming in the name of beauty,” Beckett meant by these terms an art that attacks language and reason, unity and continuity, art and life, with wit and venom.
Beckett’s Art of Mismaking explains Beckett’s views on language, the relation between work and world, and the interactions between stage and page, as well as the motives guiding his sixty-year-long career—his strange decision to adopt French as his literary language, swerve from the complex novels to the minimalist plays, determination to “fail better,” and principled refusal to follow any easy path to originality.
REVIEWS
Excellent…Where most studies are busy narrowing their focus, Durantaye roams across the Beckett canon, making connections between early and late works, and with other writers too where pertinent…Durantaye deploys theory with a confidence and lightness that are exhilarating without ever becoming flamboyant or flippant…He himself is a wonderfully lucid critic, particularly when it comes to unpicking critical clichés…On questions of characterization, setting and style he is consistently illuminating, and he has, like the finest critics, an ability to ask questions that seem obvious only once they are posed.
-- Dan Gunn Times Literary Supplement
In this lean study, de la Durantaye combines exegesis, biography, and deeply informed critical theorizing to speculate on the meaning and methodology of Samuel Beckett’s famously demanding oeuvre. De la Durantaye’s central thesis is that Beckett’s ‘logoclasm,’ or ‘ruptured writing,’ dismantled the traditional aims of literature in order to uncover what, if anything, lay beneath the language. In dense but artful chapters, de la Durantaye explores how and why this logoclasm manifested in Beckett’s preoccupation with landscapes that evoke estrangement, his Oedipal flight from friend and mentor James Joyce’s style, and the psychopathology of his ‘gallery of moribunds.’ In interpreting Beckett’s aesthetic pessimism in terms of these categories of ‘willed creative mismaking,’ de la Durantaye goes some way toward distinguishing his book from the wealth of available studies on the modernist master. [A] brief but substantial contribution.
-- Publishers Weekly
A fascinating account, both intelligent and irreverent—in the best sense of these words—of Samuel Beckett’s creative chaos, his mismaking ‘by design.’
-- Chris Ackerley, University of Otago
This book feels so different from almost every other book on Beckett. There are many insights, quick excursions, surprising allusions. The reader is a companion, part of a conversation, and the effect is very exciting, a sort of collaborative critical project. An intellectual adventure.
-- Michael Wood, Princeton University
Samuel Beckett’s works continue to intrigue audiences and enthrall critics, yet for many his work remains difficult. In this lively study, La Durantaye addresses this head on and provides a fresh approach for appreciating Beckett’s aesthetic practice…Treating the essential difficulty of Beckett’s art, this volume will prove helpful to those who find
Beckett’s work engaging and those who wish to understand more clearly his guiding artistic motivations.
-- J. S. Baggett Choice
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Note on Sources and Abbreviations
Introduction: The Art of Mismaking
Artistic Character
By No Definition
Is It Difficult?, or On Riddles
Watt?
Word-Storming, or Logoclasm
Hic sunt leones
A Brief Bit of Biography
Balzac, Bathos, Chloroform, Clockwork
The Artifice of Artificiality
Excessive Freedom, or Drama
Playing God, or L’inemmerdable
Artificiality, or The Hatchet Is Mightier Than the Pencil
Chapter 2. The Will to Mismake, or Fish and Chips
M Is for . . .
The Issue, or Fellowship
The Life of the Mind
How Not to Read Philosophy, or Reading Schopenhauer
The Artist’s View
Chapter 3. Nature Painting
Landscape Painting and the Forest of Symbols
Chapter 4. The Alibi of a Foreign Language
In French and on Style
Pour faire remarquer moi, or The Need to Be Ill-Equipped
ReJoyce
Animism
Chapter 5. To Hell with All This Fucking Scenery
Chapter 6. No Symbols Where None Intended
Mud
The Gravity of Symbolism
Allegory
Chapter 7. The Psychopathology of Character Creation, or The Series