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Samuel Beckett: Criticism (1)
   
Monographs 1960-69
Hugh Kenner, Samuel Beckett: A Critical Study (NY: California UP 1961; London: Calder 1962), 208pp. [ded. Mercier, ‘polymath' [Chaps., ‘The Man in the Room', ‘The Rational Domain', ‘The Cartesian Centaur', ‘Life in the Box', ‘Voices in the Dark'], Do. [rev. edn] (Berkeley: California UP 1968 rep. 1973), 226pp. [add. chap., ‘Progress Report 1962-65 infra]. Martin Esslin, The Theatre of the Absurd (NY: Doubleday 1961; Anchor 1962), Do. [rev. edn] (Harmondsworth: Penguin 1968). [infra]
Ruby Cohn, Samuel Beckett: The Comic Gamut (New Brunswick: Rutgers UP 1962).
John Fletcher, The Novels of Samuel Beckett (London: Chatto & Windus 1964), Do. [rev. edn] (NY: Barnes & Noble 1970; rep. 1972) [infra].
Josephine Jacobsen & Frederick J. Mueller, The Testament of Samuel Beckett (London: Faber 1964) [infra].
Richard N. Coe, Beckett (Edinburgh & London: Oliver & Boyd 1964), Do. [rev. edn] (Oliver & Boyd 1968) [infra].
F. J. Hoffman, Samuel Beckett: The Language of Self (NY: Dutton 1964).
Raymond Federman, Journey to Chaos: Samuel Beckett's Early Fiction (California UP 1965).
Nathan A. Scott, Samuel Beckett (London: Bowes & Bowes 1965; NY: Hillary House 1965; rep. 1969).
Ludovic Janvier, Pour Samuel Beckett (Paris: Editions de minuit 1966).
Pierre Mélese, Samuel Beckett (Paris: Seghers 1966).
John Fletcher, Samuel Beckett's Art (London: Chatto & Windus 1967).
Robert Harrison, Samuel Beckett's ‘Murphy': A Critical Excursion (Georgia UP 1968) [v., 99pp.]
Ronald Hayman, Samuel Beckett (London: Heinemann 1968; 2nd edn. 1974; 3rd edn. 1980).
Alec Reid, All I Can Manage, More Than I Could: An Approach to the Plays of Samuel Beckett (Dublin: Dolmen 1968), 94pp.
Michael Robinson, The Long Sonata of the Dead: A Study of Samuel Beckett (NY: Grove 1969) [2 pts.].
Ludovic Janvier, Beckett par lui-même (Paris: Editions du seuil 1969).
1970-79
Olga Bernal, Language et fiction dans les romans de Beckett [Nouvelle revue française] (Paris: Gallimard 1970).
Raymond Federman & John Fletcher, Samuel Beckett: His Works and His Critics (Berkeley: California UP 1970).
Patrick Murray, The Tragic Comedian: A Study of Samuel Beckett (Cork: Mercier 1970), 131pp.
Eugene Webb, Samuel Beckett: A Study of His Novels (London: P. Owen 1970 rep. 1972; Seattle: Washington UP 1970; reps. 1972, 1974), 192pp.
G. C. Barnard, Samuel Beckett: A New Approach: A Study of the Novels and Plays (London: Dent 1970), 144pp.
Edith Kern, Existential Thought and Fictional Technique: Kierkegaard, Sartre and Beckett (Yale UP 1970).
Lawrence E. Harvey, Samuel Beckett: Poet and Critic (New Jersey: Princeton UP 1970), 451pp. [incl. interview, ‘Beckett on Life and Art'].
Sighle Kennedy, Murphy's Bed: A Study of Real Sources and Sur-real Associations in Samuel Beckett's First Novel (Lewisburg: Bucknell UP 1971), 325pp.
David H. Hesla, The Shape of Chaos: An Interpretation of the Art of Samuel Beckett (Minnesota UP/OUP 1971), 252pp.
Francis Doherty, Samuel Beckett (London: Hutchinson UP 1971), 156pp.
James Knowlson, Light and Darkness in the Theatre of Samuel Beckett (London: Turret 1972).
Eugene Webb, The Plays of Samuel Beckett (London: Owen 1972; Seattle: Washington UP 1972; rep. 1974).
A. Alvarez, Beckett (NY: Viking; London: Fontana/Collins 1973; 2nd edn. 1992).
Brian H. Finney, Since ‘How It Is': A Study of Samuel Beckett's Later Fiction (London: Covent Garden 1973).
Hugh Kenner, Samuel Beckett: A Reader's Guide (NY: Farrar, Straus & Giroux; London: Thames & Hudson 1973) [infra].
Hans-Joachim Schulz, This Hell of Stories: A Hegelian Approach to the Novels of Samuel Beckett (The Hague/Paris: Mouton 1973).
H. Porter Abbott, The Fiction of Samuel Beckett: Form and Effect (California UP 1973), 167pp.
Hugh Kenner, The Stoic Comedians: Flaubert, Joyce and Beckett (London: W. H. Allen 1974).
Hélène L. Baldwin, Samuel Beckett's Real Silence (Philadelphia: Pennsylvania UP 1974, rep. 1981).
Ruby Cohn, Back to Beckett (New Jersey: Princeton UP 1973; rep. 1976), 274pp.
Philip H. Solomon, The Life after Birth: Imagery in Samuel Beckett's Trilogy [Romance Monographs] (Mississipi UP 1975).
John Pilling, Samuel Beckett (London: Routledge 1976).
Dina Sherzer, Structure de la trilogie de Beckett (The Hague/Paris: Mouton 1976).
Stephen Rosen, Samuel Beckett and the Pessimistic Tradition (New Brunswick: Rutgers UP 1976).
Alice and Kenneth Hamilton, Condemned to Life: The World of Samuel Beckett (Mich: William B. Eerdmans 1976).
Raili Elovaara, The Problem of Identity in Samuel Beckett's Prose (Helsinki: Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia 1976).
Clas Zilliacus, Beckett and Broadcasting: A Study of the Works of Samuel Beckett for and in Radio and Television (Finland: Abo Akademi 1976).
Vivian Mercier, Beckett/Beckett (NY: OUP 1977).
S. E. Gontarski, Beckett's ‘Happy Days': A Manuscript Study (Columbus: Ohio State University Libraries 1977).
Brian T. Fitch, La trilogie de Beckett (Paris: Minard 1977).
Bert O. States, The Shape of Paradox: An Essay on Waiting for Godot (California UP 1978), 120pp.
Beryl Fletcher and John Fletcher, A Student's Guide to the Plays of Samuel Beckett (London: Faber 1978). 2nd edn.1985).
Richard L. Admussen, The Samuel Beckett Manuscripts: A Study (Boston: G. K. Hall 1979).
Ramona Cormier & James L. Pallister, Waiting for Death: The Philosophical Significance of Beckett's ‘En Attendant Godot' (Alabama UP 1979), 155pp.
Barbara Reich Gluck, Beckett and Joyce: Friendship and Fiction (Bucknell UP 1979), 225pp.
James Knowlson & John Pilling, Frescoes of the Skull: The Later Prose and Drama of Samuel Beckett (London: John Calder 1979; NY: Grove 1980).
Ronald Hayman, Theatre and Anti-theatre: New Movements since Beckett (London: Secker & Warburg 1979), 272pp.
1980-90
Eric P. Levy, Beckett and the Voice of Species: A Study of the Prose Fiction (Dublin: Gill & Macmillan; Totowa: Barnes & Noble 1980) [infra].
Ruby Cohn, Just Play: Beckett s Theater (New Jersey: Princeton UP 1980; rep. Ann Arbor: UMI Books on Demand 1996), 314pp., ill.
James Knowlson, Theatre Workshop I: ‘Krapp's Last Tape' (London: Brutus 1980).
Eugene Kaelin, The Unhappy Consciousness: The Poetic Plight of Samuel Beckett (Dordrecht/Boston/London: D. Reidel 1981; Boston: Kulwer 1982).
John C. Di Pietro, Structures in Beckett's ‘Watt' (York, NC: French Literature Publications 1981).
Noëlle Ryan, Samuel Beckett: Early Days in Foxrock (Foxrock: Foxrock Local Hist. Club 1982), 9pp.
Angela Moorjani, Abysmal Games in the Novels of Samuel Beckett (Chapel Hill: North Carolina UP 1982).
J. E. Dearlove, Accommodating the Chaos: Samuel Beckett's Nonrelational Art (Durham: Duke UP 1982).
Morris Beja, S. E. Gontarski & Pierre Astier, eds., Samuel Beckett: Humanistic Perspectives (Ohio State UP [1982]), x, 217pp.
Charles R. Lyons, Samuel Beckett (NY: Grove 1983).
Kristin Morrison, Canters and Chronicles: The Use of Narrative in the Plays of Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter (Chicago UP 1983).
Rubin Rabinovitz, The Development of Samuel Beckett's Fiction (Chicago: Illinois UP 1984), 231pp.
Lance St. John Butler, Samuel Beckett and the Meaning of Being: A Study in Ontological Parable (London: Macmillan 1984), 213pp.
Gottfried Buttner, Samuel Beckett's Novel ‘Watt': A Gnosiological Reading, trans. Joseph P. Dolan (Pennsylvania UP 1984).
Sidney Homan, Beckett's Theatres: Interpretations for Performance (Lewisburg: Bucknell UP 1984).
James Knowlson, ‘Happy Days': Samuel Beckett's Production Notebook (London: Faber; NY: Grove 1985).
Michael Sheringham, Molloy(London: Grant & Culter 1985).
Floyd Merrell, Deconstruction Reframed (West Lafayette: Purdue UP 1985).
Virginia Cooke, Beckett on File (London: Methuen 1985).
John Fletcher & John Spurling, Beckett the Playwright [expanded editon of Beckett: A Study of His Plays] (London: Methuen; NY: Hill & Wang 1985).
S. E. Gontarski, The Intent of ‘Undoing' in Samuel Beckett's Dramatic Texts (Bloomington: Indiana UP 1985; rep. Ann Arbor: UMI 1998), xviii, 221pp.
Richard Ellmann, Samuel Beckett: Nayman of Noland [lecture] (Library of Congress 1986), 31pp., rep. in Ellmann, Wilde, Yeats, Joyce and Beckett: Four Dubliners (Washington DC: Library of Congress 1986; London: Hamish Hamilton 1987), [q.p.].
Linda Ben-Zvi, Samuel Beckett (Boston: Twayne 1986).
Alec Reid, Impact and Parable in Beckett: A First Encounter with Not I, in Terence Brown & Nicholas Grene, eds., Hermethena: A Trinity College Review, CXLI (Winter 1986), pp.12-21.
Peter Gidal, Understanding Beckett: A Study of Monologue and Gesture in the Works of Samuel Beckett (London: Macmillan 1986).
Enoch Brater, Beyond Minimalism: Beckett's Later Style in the Theater (NY/Oxford: OUP 1987).
Katherine Barkman, Myth and Ritual in the Plays of Samuel Beckett (AUP 1987), 166pp.
Susan Schurman, The Solipsistic Novels of Samuel Beckett (Cologne: Paul Rugenstein 1987).
Jennifer Birkett, Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot (London: Macmillan 1987).
Jane Alison Hale, The Broken Window: Beckett's Dramatic Perspective (Purdue UP 1987).
Susan D. Brienza, Samuel Beckett's New Worlds: Style in Metafiction (Norman/London: Oklahoma UP 1987).
Paul Foster, Beckett and Zen: A Study of the Dilemma in the Novels of Samuel Beckett (London: Wisdom 1987), 295pp.
H. Porter Abbott [et al.], “Samuel Beckett on Stage and Page”, in Romance Studies [Special issue] (Swansea: University College of Swansea 1987), 95pp.
Ruby Cohn, From Desire to Godot: Pocket Theater of Postwar Paris (Berkeley: California UP 1987; London: Calder 1998), 204pp.
Steven Connor, Samuel Beckett: Repetition, Theory and Text (London: Basil Blackwell 1988).
Laura Barge, God, Quest, the Hero: Thematic Structures in Beckett's Fiction (North Carolina UP 1988), 346pp.
Nicholas Zurbugg, Beckett and Proust (Gerrards Cross: Colin Smythe 1988).
Brian T. Fitch, Beckett and Babel: An Investigation into the Status of the Bilingual Work (Toronto UP 1988), 242pp.
Mary A. Doll, Beckett and Myth: An Archetypal Approach (Syracuse UP 1988; 1990), xiv, 206pp..
Sylvie Debevec Henning, Beckett's Critical Complicity: Carnival, Contestation, and Tradition (Kentucky UP 1988).
Dougald McMillan and Martha Fehsenfeld, Beckett in the Theatre: The Author as Practical Playwright and Director, Vol. I: From Waiting for Godot to Krapp's Last Tape (London: J. Calder; NY: Riverrun 1988).
Rosemary Pountney, Theatre of Shadows: Samuel Beckett's Drama 1956-76 (Gerrards Cross: Colin Smythe 1988. Totowa: Barnes & Noble 1988; rep. 1998), 310pp.
Hema V. Raghavan, Samuel Beckett: Rebels and Exiles in His Plays (Liverpool: Lucas 1988).
Valerie Topsfield, The Humour of Samuel Beckett (London: Macmillan 1988).
Jonathan Kalb, Beckett in Performance (Cambridge: CUP 1989).
Lawrence Graver, Waiting for Godot (Cambridge: CUP 1989).
Andrew K. Kennedy, Samuel Beckett (Cambridge: CUP 1989).
Enoch Brater, Why Beckett (London: Thames & Hudson 1989), rep. as The Essential Samuel Beckett: An Illustrated Biography (London: Thames & Hudson 2003), 144pp.
Paul Foster, Beckett and Zen (London: Wisdom 1989).
1990-99
Gordon Armstrong, Samuel Beckett, W. B. Yeats, and Jack Yeats: Images and Words (Lewisburg: Bucknell UP 1990).
Katherine Worth, Waiting for Godot and Happy Days: Text and Performance (London: Macmillan 1990).
Thomas Cousineau, Waiting for Godot: Form in Movement (NY: Twayne 1990).
Alan Astro, Understanding Samuel Beckett (Columbia: South Carolina UP 1990), 222pp.
Leslie Hill, Beckett's Fiction: In Different Words (Cambridge UP 1990), 187pp.
Carla Locatelli, Unwording the World: Samuel Beckett's Prose Works after the Nobel Prize (Pennsylvania UP 1990).
Shimon Levy, Samuel Beckett's Self-Referential Drama (London: Macmillan 1990).
Christopher Ricks, Beckett's Dying Words: The Clarendon Lectures (Oxford: Clarendon Press 1990).
David Watson, Paradox and Desire in Beckett's Fiction (London: Macmillan 1990).
Thomas Trezise, Into the Breach: Samuel Beckett and the Ends of Literature (New Jersey: Princeton UP 1990).
P. J. Murphy, Reconstructing Beckett: Language for Being in Samuel Beckett's Fiction (Toronto UP 1990).
Joseph H. Smith, Two Worlds of Samuel Beckett (Johns Hopkins UP 1991).
John P. Harrington, The Irish Beckett (Syracuse UP 1991) [infra].
François Bruzzo, Samuel Beckett (Paris: H. Veyrier 1991).
Torsten Ekbom, Samuel Beckett (Stockholm: Natur och Kultur 1991).
Gerhard Hauck, Reductionism in Drama and the Theatre: The Case of Samuel Beckett (Potomac: Scripta Humanistica 1992).
Marius Buning, Sjef Houppermans and Danièle de Ruyter-Tognotti, eds., Samuel Beckett 1970-1989 (Amsterdam/Atlanta: Rodopi 1992), 172pp.
Toyama, Jean Yamasaki, Beckett's Game: Self and Language in the Trilogy [American university studies, ser. 2] (NY & London: Peter Lang [1992]), 129pp.
Kees Hessing, Beckett on Tape: Productions of Samuel Beckett's Work in Film, Video, and Audio (Leiden: Academic Press 1992).
Sidney Homan, Filming Beckett's Television Plays: A Director's Experience (Lewisburg: Bucknell UP 1992).
Stephen Connor, ed., Waiting for Godot & Endgame [New Casebooks Series] (London: Macmillan 1992), ix, 172pp. [incl. Alan Wilde, et al.]
Rubin Rabinovitz, Innovation in Samuel Beckett's Fiction (Illinois UP 1992), 218pp.
Lawrence Miller, Samuel Beckett: The Expressive Dilemma (London: Macmillan; NY: St. Martins 1992), xv, 189pp.
Roy Clements, The Alternative Wisden on Samuel Barclay Beckett (Daripress 1992).
Angela Moorjani, The Aesthetics of Loss and Lessness (London: Macmillan 1992).
Gregory Johns, In the Dim Void: Samuel Beckett's Late Trilogy (Kiddermaster: Crescent Moon 1993), 69pp. [concerns Company Illseen, Ill Said and Worstward Ho].
Eyal Amiran, Wandering and Home: Beckett's Metaphysical Narrative (Pennsylvania State UP 1993).
Jeremy Robinson, Samuel Beckett Goes into Silence (Kiddermaster: Crescent Moon 1993), 120pp.
Anna McMullan, Theatre on Trial: Samuel Beckett's Later Drama (NY/London: Routledge 1993), 155pp.
Arthur N. Athanason, Endgame: The Ashbin Play (NY: Twayne 1993).
S. E. Gontarski, ed., The Beckett Studies Reader (Florida UP [1993], 238pp., ill. [ports.].
Mary Bryden, Women in Samuel Beckett's Prose and Drama: Her Own Other (London: Macmillan; Lanham: Barnes & Noble 1993).
Enoch Brater, The Drama in the Text: Beckett's Later Fiction (NY/Oxford: OUP 1994), 233p.
Paul Davies, The Ideal Real: Becketts Fiction and Imagination (Rutherford, Madison & Teaneck; Farleigh Dickinson UP 1994), 270pp.
Pultar, Gönül, Technique and Tradition in Beckett's Trilogy of Novels (Lanham [Md.]: University Press of America [1996]), 177pp.
Marius Buning, Intertexts in Becketts Work (Amsterdam/Atlanta: Rodopi 1994), 135pp.
Mary Junker, Beckett: The Irish Dimension (Dublin: Wolfhound 1995), 208pp. [infra].
Billie Whitelaw, Billie Whitelaw ... Who He? (London: Hodder & Stoughton 1995).
Charles Juliet, Conversations with Samuel Beckett and Bram van Velde, trans. Janey Tucker, with intro. & notes by Adrian van der Weel & Ruud Hisgen (Leiden: Academic Press 1995) [first pub. in French as Rencontres avec Bram van Velde (Montpellier: Fata Morgana 1973; Aug. 1978) and afterwards as Rencontres avec Samuel Beckett (1986)],
Mel Gussow [NY critic who met Beckett annually, 1978-], Conversations with (and about) Beckett (London: Nick Hern 1996), 160pp.
Adam Piette, Mallarmé, Proust, Joyce, Beckett: Remembering and the Sounds of Words (OUP 1996).
John Minihan, Samuel Beckett, intro. Aidan Higgins, (London: Secker & Warburg 1996), 96pp., ill.
Lois Gordon, The World of Samuel Beckett 1906-1945 (Yale UP 1996; rep. 1998), 250pp.
Ackerley, C. J., Demented Particulars: The Annotated Murphy, pref. by S. E. (Tallahassee, Fla.: Journal of Beckett Studies Books 1998), q.p.
H. Porter Abbott, Beckett Writing Beckett: The Author in the Autograph (Cornell UP 1996), xii, 192pp.
Richard Begam, Samuel Beckett and the End of Modernity (Stanford UP 1997), 237pp.
James Acheson, Samuel Beckett's Artistic Theory and Practice: Criticism, Drama and Early Fiction (London: Macmillan 1997), 254pp.
John Pilling, Beckett Before Godot (Cambridge UP 1998), 277pp.
Mary Bryden, Samuel Beckett and the Idea of God (London: Macmillan 1998), 204pp.
J. D. O'Hara, Samuel Beckett's Hidden Drives: Structural Uses of Deep Psychology (Florida UP 1998), 320pp.
Phil Baker, Beckett and the Mythology of Psychoanalysis (London: Macmillan 1998), 225pp.
Richard Begam, Samuel Beckett amd the End of Modernity (Stanford UP/Cambridge: CUP 1998), 237pp.
Cousineau, Thomas J., After the Final No: Samuel Beckett's Trilogy (Delaware UP 1999), [q.pp.]
Mary Lydon & David Lloyd, The Beckett family - Samuel Beckett [entry], in W. J. McCormack, ed., Blackwood Companion to Modern Irish Culture (Oxford: Blackwell 1999), pp.56-61.
2000-
Paul Davies, Beckett and Eros: Death of Humanism (London: Macmillan; NY: St Martins s 2000), 256pp.
Darren Gribben, Samuel Beckett and the Disembodied Irish Narrative Voice (MA Diplo in Anglo-Irish Literature, Univ. of Ulster 2000).
David Pattie, The Complete Critical Guide to Samuel Beckett (London: Routledge 2000; NY: Routledge 2001), 219pp.
Marius Buning, ed., Beckett and Religion: Beckett/Aesthetics/Politics [Beckett Today/aujourd'hui, No. 9] (Amsterdam: Rodopi 2000).
Herbert Blau, Sailing the Herring Fleet: Essays on Samuel Beckett (Michigan UP [2000]).
Gerry Dukes, ed., First love and Other Novellas [Penguin Modern Classics] (London: Penguin 2000), 192pp.
Alan Warren Friedman, ed., Beckett in Black and Red: The Translations for Nancy Cunard's "Negro" [1934] (Kentucky UP 2000), xl, 207pp.
Lois Oppenheim, The Painted Word: Samuel Becketts Dialogue with Art (Michigan UP 2000).
Jennifer Birkett and Kate Ince, eds., Samuel Beckett (London: Longman 2000), xi, 291pp. [incls. George Bataille, ‘Molloy's Silence’, cp.86].
John Pilling, ed., Beckett's Dream Notebook (Reading: Beckett Internat. Found. 1999), 197pp.
Anthony Uhlmann, Beckett and Poststructuralism (Cambridge UP 2000).
John Calder, The Philosophy of Samuel Beckett (London: Calder Publs. 2001), 152pp.
David Bradby, Waiting For Godot (Cambridge UP 2001), xii, 255pp.
Ronan McDonald, Tragedy and Irish Literature: Synge, OCasey, Beckett (London: Palgrave 2002), 214pp.
S. E. Gontarski, ‘Beckett and Performance', in Journal of Irish Studies [IASIL-Japan], XVII (2002), pp.89-97
John Haynes & James Knowlson, Images of Beckett (Cambridge UP 2003), 174pp. [photos. & commentary].
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Articles
& papers
1934-1959
Francis Watson, review of More Pricks than Kicks, in
Bookman, 86 (1934), [q.p.]
Dylan Thomas, review of Murphy, in New English Weekly
(17 March 1938), pp.454-55 [infra];
rep. in Lawrence Graver & Raymond Federman, eds., Critical
Heritage (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul 1974), p.47.
Kate O’Brien, review of Murphy, in Spectator (25 March 1938), [q.p.]
Richard Seaver, ‘Samuel Beckett, An Introduction’, Merlin,
1, 2 (1952), [infra].
Kenneth Tynan, review of London premier of Waiting For Godot
(3 Aug. 55, Arts Theatre London), [infra]
Samuel Mintz, ‘Beckett’s Murphy: A Cartesian Novel’, Perspective, 2, 3 (1959), pp.156-65.
1960-69
Melvin J. Friedman, ‘The Novels of Samuel Beckett: An Amalgam
of Joyce and Proust’, Comparative Literature, 12, 1 (1960),
pp.47-58.
Vivian Mercier, Samuel Beckett and the Sheela-na-gig’,
in Kenyon Review, 23, 2 (Spring 1961), pp.299-324.
Theodor W. Adorno, Versuch, das Endspiel zu verstehen, Noten zur Literatur II (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp
1961), pp.188-236.
Theodor W. Adorno, Engagement, in Noten zur Literatur
III (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp 1965), pp.109-35, trans.
as Commitment, in New Left Review, 87-88 (1974),
pp.75-89 [infra].
Theodor W. Adorno, Trying to Understand Endgame,
in New German Critique, 26 (Summer 1982), pp.119-50.
Nathan A. Scott, The Recent Journey into the Zone Of Zero:
The Example of Beckett and his Despair of Literature, in Centennial Review, 6, 2 (Spring 1962), pp. 144-181.
Susan Field Senneff, ‘Song and Music in Samuel Beckett’s Watt’, Modern Fiction Studies, 10, 2 (1964), pp.137-49.
Peter Brook, ‘Endgame as King Lear or How to Stop Worrying and
Love Beckett’, Encore, 12 (Jan.-Feb. 1965, pp.8-12 [infra]
Sean O’Casey, ‘Not Waiting for Godot’, in Blasts and Benedictions:
Articles and Stories, ed. Sean O'Casey (London: Macmillan;
NY: St. Martin's Press 1967), pp.51-52 [infra].
Marilyn Gaddis Rose, ‘The Purgatory Metaphor of Yeats and Beckett’, London Magazine, 7 (Aug. 67), pp.33-46.
Thomas E. Porter, S.J., ‘Samuel Beckett: Dramatic Tradition
and the Ausländer’, Éire-Ireland, 4, 1 (Spring 1969),
pp. 62-75 [infra].
Marilyn Gaddis Rose, ‘Solitary Companions in Beckett and Jack
B. Yeats’, Éire-Ireland, 4, 2 (Summer 1969), pp.
66-80 [infra].
J. C. C. Mays, ‘Beckett and the Irish’, Hibernia, 23
(7 Nov. 69), p.14.
1970-79
Alan Parkin, ‘Similarities in the Plays of Yeats and Beckett’, Ariel, 1 (July 1970), pp.49-58
Marilyn Rose, ‘The Irish Memories of Beckett’s Voice’, Journal
of Modern Literature, 2, 1 (Sept. 71), pp.127-32
Hugh B. Staples, ‘Beckett in the Wake’, James Joyce
Quarterly, 8, 4 (Summer 1971), pp.421-24
Frederick S. Kiley, ‘Baedeker for Beckett’, Éire-Ireland,
6, 4 (Winter 1971), pp.104-09
Melvin Friedman, ‘Samuel Beckett and His Critics Enter the
1970s’, Studies in the Novel, 3 (1973), pp.383-99
Enoch Brater, ‘The “I” in Beckett’s Not I’, Twentieth-century
Literature, 20, 3 (July 1974), pp.189-200
James Atlas, ‘The Prose of Samuel Beckett: Notes from the Terminal
Ward’, in Two Decades of Irish Writing, ed. Douglas Dunn
(Manchester: Carcanet 1975), pp.186-96
J. C. C. Mays, ‘Mythologising [var. Mythologised] Presences: Murphy and its Time’, in Myth and Reality in Irish Literature,
ed. Joseph Ronsley (Toronto: Wilfrid Laurier 1977), pp.197-218
Deirdre Bair, ‘No-Man’s-Land, Hellespont or Vacuum: Samuel Beckett’s
Irishness’, Crane Bag, 1, 2 (1977),[q.p.], rep. in Crane
Bag Book of Irish Studies (1977-1981), M. P. Hederman
and R. Kearney eds. (Dublin: Blackwater 1982), pp.101-06
James Acheson, ‘Schopenhauer, Proust and Beckett’, Contemporary
Literature (1978), pp.165-79
R. J. Davis, ‘Beckett as Translator’, Long Room [TCD],
16 & 17 (Spring/Autumn 1978), pp.29-34
James Acheson, ‘Murphy’s Metaphysics’, Journal of Beckett
Studies, 5 (1979), pp.9-24
Alec Reid, ‘Test Flight: Beckett’s More Pricks than Kicks’,
in P. Rafroidi and Terence Brown eds., The Irish Short Story (Gerrards Cross: Colin Smythe; Atlantic Highlands: Humanities
1979), pp.227-35.
1980-1989
Enoch Brater, ‘Why Beckett’s Enough is More or Less Enough’, Contemporary Literature, 21 (1980), pp.252-66
Mary Power, ‘Samuel Beckett’s “Fingal” and the Irish
Tradition’, Journal of Modern Literature, 9, 1 (1981-82),
pp.151-56
Patrick Casement, ‘Samuel Beckett’s Relationship to his Mother-tongue’, International Review of Psychoanalysis, 9 (1982), pp.33-44
Jan Bruck, ‘Beckett, Benjamin, and the Modern Crisis in Communication’, New German Critique, 26 (1982), pp.159-71
Martha Fehsenfeld, ‘Beckett’s Late Works: An Appraisal’, Modern
Drama, 25, 3 (Sept. 1982), pp.355-62
Anthony Cronin, ‘Samuel Beckett: Murphy Becomes Unnamable’,
in Heritage Now: Irish Literature in the English Language (Dingle:
Brandon 1982), pp.169-84
Paul Bové, ‘Beckett’s Dreadful Postmodernism: The Deconstruction
of Form in Molloy’, in De-structing the Novel: Essays
in Applied Postmodernist Hermeneutics, ed. Leonard Orr (Troy,
N.Y.: Whitston 1982), pp.185-221.
Singer, Alan, ‘The Need of the Present: How It Is with
the Subject in Beckett’s Novel’ in A Metaphorics of Fiction:
Discontinuity and Discourse in the Modern Novel (Florida UP
1983), pp.115-56
Allen Thiher, ‘Wittgenstein, Heidegger, The Unnamable,
and Sound Thoughts on the Status of Voice in Fiction’, in Morris
Beja, S.E. Gontarski and Pierre Astieret eds., Samuel Beckett:
Humanistic Perspectives (Columbus: Ohio State UP 1983), p.65
[infra]
Roger Scruton, ‘Beckett and the Cartesian Soul’, in The Aesthetic
Understanding (Manchester: Carcanet 1983), pp.222-43
Allen Thiher, ‘Wittgenstein, Heidegger, The Unnamable,
and Sound Thoughts on the Status of Voice in Fiction’, in Morris
Beja, S. E. Gontarski and Pierre Astier eds., Samuel Beckett:
Humanistic Perspectives (Columbus: Ohio State UP 1983), pp.65ff.
[infra]
J. C. C. Mays, ‘Young Beckett’s Irish Roots, Irish University
Review, 14, 1 (Spring, 1984), pp.18-33 [infra]
Richard Kearney, Myth and Motherland [Field Day Pamplets,
No. 5] (Derry: Field Day Co 1984) [infra]
Richard Kearney, ‘Beckett: The Demythologising Intellect’, in
Richard Kearney, ed., The Irish Mind: Exploring Intellectual
Traditions (Dublin: Wolfhound 1985), pp.267-93 [infra]
Murray, Christopher, Beckett Productions in Ireland: A
Survey, in Irish University Review, 14, 1 (Spring
1984), pp.103-25.
Seamus Deane, ‘Joyce and Beckett’, in Celtic Revivals: Essays
in Modern Irish Literature 1880-1980 (London: Faber 1985),
pp.123-34
D. E. S. Maxwell, ‘J. M. Synge and Samuel Beckett’, in Gerald
Dawe and Edna Longley, eds., Across the Roaring Hill: The Protestant
Imagination in Modern Ireland (Belfast: Blackstaff 1985),
pp.24-38
Declan Kiberd, ‘Samuel Beckett and the Protestant Ethic’, in
Augustine Martin, ed., The Genius of Irish Prose (Cork:
Mercier 1985), pp.121-30 [infra]
Declan Kiberd, Beckett's Texts of Laughter and Forgetting,
in Inventing Ireland (London: Cape 1995), pp.530-50 [infra]
David Cairns & Shaun Richards, Writing Ireland: Colonialism,
Nationalism and Culture (Manchester
UP 1988), pp.136-37 [infra]
J. C. C. Mays, Esse Est Percipi: Beckett’s Plays, Irish Review, 1 (1986), pp.34-44
James Acheson, ‘Chess with Audience ... Endgame’, in Patrick
A. McCarthy, ed. Critical Essays on Samuel Beckett (Boston:
G. K. Hall 1986), [q.p.]
Hugh Kenner, ‘Beckett at 80’, Irish Times (12 April
1986), [q.p.]
Lawrence Shainberg, interview with Beckett, Paris Review
(Fall 1987), [q.p.]
H. Porter Abbott, ‘Narratricide: Semauel Beckett as Autobiographer’, Romance Studies, 11 (Winter 1987), pp.35-46
David Lloyd, ‘Writing in the Shit: Beckett, Nationalism and
the Colonial Subject’, Irish Review, 4 (Spring 1988), pp.59-72,
enl. edn. in Modern Fiction Studies, 35, 1 (Spring 1989),
[q.p.], and in Anomalous States: Irish Writing and the Post-colonial
Moment (Dublin: Lilliput 1993), pp.41-58
1990-1999
Paul Davies, ‘No, he’s the last great romantic’, in Richard
York, ed., ‘Beckett Supplement’, Fortnight Magazine, 283
(April 1990), [unpaginated supplement]
Paul Davies, ‘Twilight and Universal Vision: Samuel Beckett’s Ill Seen Ill Said’, Temenos [II] (1990), pp.88-103
John Cronin, ‘Samuel Beckett: Murphy’, in The Anglo-Irish
Novel, [volume 2] (Belfast: Appletree 1990), pp.159-69
Gerry McCarthy, ‘On the Meaning of Performance in Beckett’s Not I’, Modern Drama, 33, 4 (Dec. 90), pp.455-69
Anna McMullan, ‘Samuel Beckett’s Cette Fois: Betwen Time(s)
and Space(s)’, French Studies: A Quarterly Review, 44,
4 (Oct. 90), pp.23-34
Francis Doherty, ‘Watt in an Irish Frame’, Irish University
Review, 20, 2 (Autumn 1990), pp.187-203
J. C. C. Mays, ‘Samuel Beckett: 1907-1989’ [editorial essay],
in Field Day Anthology of Irish Wriiting, gen. ed. Seamus
Deane (Derry: Field Day Co. 1991), pp.233-238
Werner Huber, Notes on Beckett’s Reception in Germany’,
in Geert Lernout, ed., The Crows Behind the Plough: History
and Violence in Anglo-Irish Poetry and Drama [Costerus Ser.
Vol. 79] (Amsterdam: Rodopi 1991), pp.30-39
J. C. C. Mays, ‘Flann O’Brien, Beckett, and the Undecidable
Text of Ulysses’, Irish University Review, 22, 1
(Spring/Summer 1992), pp.127-34
James Knowlson, Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett
(London: Bloomsbury 1996), 872pp.
Declan Kiberd, ‘Beckett and the Life to Come’, in S. E. Wilmer,
ed., Beckett in Dublin (Dublin: Lilliput 1992), pp.75-84
[infra]
Thomas Kinsella, ‘Poems of Samuel Beckett’, Journal of Beckett
Studies, 2, 2 (1993), pp.15-18
Christopher Ricks, ‘Beckett’s Dying Words: The Vision of Positive
Annihilation and the Refusal to Discard the Real’, Times Literary
Supplement (9 July 1993), pp.13-15
Robert Welch, ‘Samuel Beckett: “Matrix of Surds”, in Changing States: Transformations in Modern Irish Writing (London:
Routledge 1993), pp.162-86
John Sexton, ‘Desire of Oblivion’, review of Beckett’s Dying
Words by Christopher Ricks, Critical Essays on Samuel
Beckett, ed. Lance St. John Butler and The Beckett Studies
Reader, ed. S. E. Gontarski, in Times Literary Supplement (1 Oct. 93), pp.7-8
Rodney Sharkey, ‘”Irish? Au contraire!”: The Search
for Identity in the Fictions of Samuel Beckett’, Journal of
Beckett Studie,s 3, 2 (1994), pp.1-18.
James E. Robinson, ‘Writing Towards Zero: Beckett at the Ending’, Irish University Review, 25, 2 (Autumn/Winter 1995), pp.215-31
Declan Kiberd, Inventing Ireland: The Literature of the Modern
Nation (London: Jonathan Cape 1995) [‘Religious Writing: Beckett
and Others’, pp.455-67 and ‘Beckett’s Texts of Laughter and Forgetting’,
pp.531-50; infra]
Patricia Coughlan, The Poetry is Another Pair of
Sleeves: Beckett, Ireland and Modernist Lyric Poetry,
in Patricia Coughlan and Alex Davis, eds., Modernism in Ireland:
The Poetry of the 1930s (Cork UP 1995), pp.173-208
Anthony Roche, ‘Beckett and Yeats: Among the Dreaming Shades’,
and ‘Beckett and Behan: Waiting for Your Man’, in Contemporary
Irish Drama From Beckett to McGuinness [Gill’s Studies in
Irish Literature, gen. ed. Terence Brown] (Dublin: Gill & Macmillan
1995), pp.13-35 and 36-71.
Mary Lynch, ‘For Easter/For Ireland: The Epiphanies
of Samuel Beckett’s Cascando’, in Studies (Spring
1996), pp.27-36
Karl-Heinz Westarp, ‘Aspects of Time and Identity in Samuel
Beckett’, in Karl-Heinz Westarp and Michael Böss, eds., Ireland:
Towards New Identities? (Denmark/Oakville, Conn.: Aarhus UP
1998), pp.157-64
Gerry Smyth, Decolonisation and Criticism: The Construction
of Irish Literature (London: Pluto 1998), p.38 [infra].
2000-
Paul Davies, Beckett, the Buddha and The Goddess: Womb
of the Great Mother Emptiness, in Samuel Beckett Today/
Aujourd'hui 9 (2000), [q.p.]
John Fletcher, Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot, Krapp's
Last Tape, Endgame (London: Faber & Faber 2000), 256pp.
Christopher Morash, A Night at the Theatre 6: Waiting
for Godot [...], Pike Theatre, Friday 28 October 1955 [chap.], A History of Irish Theatre 1601-2000 (Cambridge
UP 2002), pp.199-208.
Lois Gordon, Reading Godot (Yale UP 2002), q.pp. [on
Samuel Beckett].
Alex Davis, The Irish Modernists and Their Legacy,
in Matthew Campbell, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Contemporary
Irish Poetry (Cambridge UP 2003), pp.76-93, espec. p.80.
Lois Oppenheim, Palgrave Advances in Beckett Studies (London: Palgrave 2004), 274pp. [contribs. incl. Enoch Brach, Peter Oxall, Linda Ben-Zvi, Mary Bryden, Angela Moorjani, et al.] .
|
Major
biographies
Deirdre Bair, Samuel Beckett: A Biography (NY: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich;
London: Jonathan Cape 1978), 736pp. with index, 42 ills.; James Knowlson,
Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett (London: Bloomsbury
1996), 875pp., trans. by Oristelle Bonis as Samuel Beckett: un illustre
inconnu ([Paris]: Solin/Actes Sud 1998); Anthony Cronin, Samuel
Beckett: The Last Modernist (London: HarperCollins 1996), 655pp. [infra]
Critical
Collections
Martin Esslin, ed., Twentieth-century Views: Samuel Beckett
(NJ: Prentice-Hall 1965), 182pp. [infra];
Colin Duckworth, ed., En attendant Godot: piece en deux actes (London:
Harrap 1966); W. J. McCormack, ed.,], Beckett at 60: A Festschrift
(London: Calder & Boyars 1967), 100pp. [infra];
Bell Gaele Chevigny, ed., Twentieth-Century Interpretations of “Endgame”
(NJ: Prentice Hall 1969), 120pp. [infra];
Melvin J. Friedman, ed., Samuel Beckett Now: Critical Approaches
to his Novels, Poetry, and Plays (Chicago UP 1970), 275pp. [infra];
James Donald O'Hara, ed., Twentieth-century Interpretations of Molloy,
Malone Dies,The Unnamable: A Collection of Critical Essays (NJ:
Prentice-Hall [1970]), iii, 120pp.; Katherine Worth, ed., Beckett the
Shape Changer: A Symposium (London/Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul
1975), 227pp. [infra]; Ruby Cohn, ed., Samuel
Beckett: A Collection of Criticism (NY: McGraw-Hill 1975), 138pp.
[infra]; Edouard Morot-Sir, Howard Harper
& Dougald McMillan, eds., Samuel Beckett: The Art of Rhetoric
(North Carolina UP 1976); Kathleen McGrory & John Unterecker, eds.,
Yeats, Joyce, and Beckett: New Light on Three Modern Irish Writers
(Lewisburg: Bucknell UP 1976) [infra];
Tom Bishop & Raymond Federman, eds., Samuel Beckett (Paris:
Edition de l’Herne 1976; rep. Paris: Librairie Générale Française 1985;
rep. Paris: Éditions de l’Herne 1997) [English & French; contribs.
incl. Allan Schneider, Erika Ostrovsky, Julia Kristeva, Walter A. Strauss,
& Hélène Cixous]; Lawrence Graver & Raymond Federman,
eds., Samuel Beckett: The Critical Heritage (London: Routledge
1979; 1997), 372pp.; Morris Beja, S. E. Gontarski & Pierre A. Astier,
eds., Samuel Beckett: Humanistic Perspectives (Columbus: Ohio State
UP 1983), 217pp. [infra]; John Pilling, ed.,
Cambridge Companion to Beckett (Cambridge: CUP 1984), 249pp. [infra]; Patrick A. McCarthy, ed., Critical
Essays on Samuel Beckett (Boston: G. K. Hall 1986) [contribs. incl.
John Pilling, Roch C. Smith, Kay Gilliland Stevenson, James Acheson et
al.]; Enoch Brater, ed., Beckett at 80: Beckett in Context (NY:
OUP 1986), 238pp. [infra]; [no ed.], As
No Other Dare Fail: For Samuel Beckett on His 80th Birthday by His Friends
and Admirers (London: John Calder; NY: Riverrun 1986) [q. eds]; S.
E. Gontarski, ed., On Beckett: Essays and Criticism (NY: Grove
1986), 418pp. [infra]; James Acheson
& Kateryna Arthur, eds., Beckett’s Later Fiction and Drama: Texts
for Company (London: Macmillan; NY: St. Martin's 1987), 206pp. [infra];
Harold Bloom, ed., Samuel Beckett's “Waiting for Godot” (NY:
Chelsea House 1987), 131pp. [infra]; Ruby
Cohn, ed., Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot: A Casebook (London:
Macmillan 1987), 256pp. [infra]; Alan Warren
Friedman, Charles Rossman & Dina Sherzer, eds., Beckett Translating/Translating
Beckett (Pennsylvania State UP 1987), 245pp. [22 essays]; Katherine
H. Burkman, ed., Myth and Ritual in the Plays of Samuel Beckett (Rutherford,
Madison & Teaneck: Fairleigh Dickinson UP 1987), 169pp. [contribs. incl. Mary
A. Doll, also bibl.]; Harold Bloom, ed., Samuel Beckett: Molloy, Malone
Dies, The Unnamable [Modern Critical Interpretations] (Chelsea Hse.
Publ. 1988), 159pp.; Harold Bloom, ed., Samuel Beckett's “Endgame”;
[Modern Critical Interpretations] (NY: Chelsea House 1988), 160pp.
[infra]; Robin J. Davis & Lance St.
John Butler, eds., “Make Sense Who May”: Essays on Samuel
Beckett’s Later Works (Gerrards Cross: Colin Smythe 1988; 1989), 175pp.
[infra]; Enoch Brater and Ruby Cohn, eds.,
Around the Absurd: Essays on Modern and Postmodern Drama (Michigan
UP 1990), 316pp. [infra]; Lance St John
Butler & Robin J. Davis, eds., Rethinking Beckett: A Collection
of Critical Essays (Basingstoke: Macmillan 1990), 207pp. [infra];
Linda Ben-Zvi, ed., Women in Beckett, Performance and Critical Perspectives
(Illinois UP 1990), 260pp. [infra]; Joseph
H. Smith, ed., The World of Samuel Beckett (Johns Hopkins UP 1991),
226pp. [infra]; S. E. Wilmer, ed., Beckett
in Dublin (Dublin: Lilliput 1992) [infra];
John Pilling & Mary Bryden, eds., The Ideal Core of the Onion:
Reading Beckett Archives (Reading: Beckett International Foundation
1992), 151pp. [infra]; Steve E. Wilmer,
ed., Beckett in Dublin [papers at Dublin Beckett Festival, 1991]
(Dublin: Lilliput Press 1992) [incl. bibl. and 14 photos by Tom Lawlor of Gate
Productions]; Lance St John Butler, ed., Critical Essays on Samuel
Beckett [Critical Thought Ser. 4] (Aldershot: Scholar Press 1993),
376pp.; S. E. Gontarski, ed., The Beckett Studies Reader (Florida
UP 1993), 238pp. [infra]; Marius Buning
& Lois Oppenheim, eds., Beckett in the 1990s: Selected Papers from
the Second International Beckett Symposium held in the Hague 8-12 April
1992 (Amsterdam: Rodopi 1994); Enoch Brater, ed., The Theatrical
Gamut: Notes for a Post-Beckettian Stage (Michigan UP 1995), 304pp.
[infra]; Marius Buning
& Lois Oppenheim, eds., Beckett Today/Aujourd’hui [Papers of
2nd International Samuel Beckett Conference, Hague, April 1992] (Associated
UP 1996); Lois Oppenheim, ed., Directing Beckett (Michigan UP 1994),
320pp. [infra]; Lois Oppenheim
& Marius Buning, eds., Beckett On and On .. [Further papers
of 2nd International Samuel Beckett Conference, Hague, April 1992] (Associated
UP 1996), 259pp. [infra]; Marius Buning,
Matthijs Engelberts and Sjef Houppermans, eds., guest ed., Emmanuel Jacquart,
Samuel Beckett: Crossroads and Borderlines (Amsterdam/Atlanta:
Rodopi 1997), 412pp.; Marius Buning, Danièle de Ruyter-Tognotti, Matthijs
Engelberts and Sjef Houppermans, eds., Beckett Versus Beckett (Amsterdam/Atlanta:
Rodopi 1998), 438pp.; Mary Bryden, ed., Samuel Beckett and Music (Clarendon
1998), 267pp. [contribs. incl. John Pilling, Edward Beckett, Walter Beckett,
Miron Grindea, Harry White, Catherine Law, Morton Feldman, edith Fournier,
Peter Szendy, Giacomo Manzoni, et al.], Katharine Worth, Bruce Stewart,
ed., Beckett and Beyond [Princess Grave Irish Library Series No.
9] (Gerrards Cross: Colin Smythe 1999), 318pp. [infra].
Reference
& bibliography
J. F. T. Tanner & J. D. Vann eds., Samuel Beckett: A Checklist
of Criticism (Kent State UP 1969), 85pp.; Raymond Federman and John
Fletcher, Samuel Beckett, His Work and His Critics: An Essay in Bibliography
(California UP 1970), 383pp.; Robin Davis, Samuel Beckett: Checklist
and Index of his Published Works 1967-76 (Univ. of Stirling Library
1979); Richard L. Admussen, The Samuel Beckett Manuscripts: A Study
(Boston: G. K. Hall 1979); Breon Mitchell, ‘A Beckett Bibliography: New
Works 1976-82’, Modern Fiction Studies 29, 1 (Spring 1983), pp.131-51;
Carlton Lake, No Symbols Where None Intended: A Collection of Books,
Manuscripts, and Other Material Relating to Samuel Beckett in the Collections
of the Humanities Research Center (Texas UP [HRC] 1984), 186pp.; Rolf
Breuer, Harald Gundel and Werner Huber eds., Beckett Criticism in German:
A Bibliography [Deutsche Beckett-Kritik: Eine Bibliographie]
(München: W. Fink 1986), 85pp.; Cathleen Culotta Andonian, Samuel Beckett:
A Reference Guide (Boston: G. K. Hall 1989), [bibl. of criticism];
John Pilling, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Beckett (Cambridge
UP 1994), 249pp. [infra]; P. J. Murphy, Critique
of Beckett Criticism: A Guide to Research in English, French, and German
(Columbia: Camden House 1994), 173pp.; Rolf Breuer and Werner Huber,
A Checklist of Beckett Criticism in German (Paderborn: Ferdinand
Schöningh 1996), 100pp.; Mary Bryden, Julian, Garforth & Peter
Mills eds., Beckett at Reading: Catalogue of the Beckett Manuscript
Collection at the University of Reading (Whiteknights Press and the
Beckett International Foundation] (Reading University Library 1998), xvii,
197pp. [Part 1: Poetry; Part 2: Drama; Part 3: Prose; Part 4: Miscellaneous].
Critical
Journals
Perspective, 2, 3 (1959); Cahiers Renaud Barrault, 44 (Nov.
1966), Do. 9, 3 (1976), and Do. 102 (1981); Ruby Cohn, ed.,
Modern Dram,a 9, 3 (Dec. 1966); Do. 19, 3 (Sept. 1976),
Do. 25, 3 (Sept. 1982), Do. 26, 4 (Dec. 1983), Do.
28, 1 (March 1985); James Joyce Quarterly, 8 (Summer 1971); L’Esprit
créateu, II (Fall 1971); James Knowlson, ed., Journal of
Beckett Studies, 1-12 (1976-89) [website],
and Do., n.s., 1- (1992- ); Enoch Brater, ed., Journal of Modern
Literature, 6, 1 (Feb. 1977); Journal of the Australian Universities
Language and Literature Association, 5, 5 (May 1981); Centrepoint:
A Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies, 4, 2 (Fall 1981); Modern
Fiction Studies, 29, 1 (Spring 1983); Maurice Harmon, ed., ‘Beckett
Special Issue’, Irish University Review, 14, 1 (Spring 1984) [infra];
Terence Brown & Nicholas Grene, eds., ‘Beckett at 80: A Birthday Tribute’,
Hermathena, 141 (Winter 1986) [infra];
Revue d’esthétique [hors-série] (March 1986); Review
of Contemporary Fiction, 7, 2 (Summer 1987); Romance Studies,
II (Winter 1987); Critique, 519-20 (Aug.-Sept. 1990); Europe,
770-7I (June-July 1993). Also The Beckett Circle [newsletter].
General studies
Vivian Mercier, The Irish Comic Tradition (OUP 1962); Hugh Kenner,
The Counterfeitors: An Historical Comedy [ill. Guy Davenport] (Indiana
UP 1968); David Krause, The Profane Book of Irish Comedy (Cornell
UP 1982).
Miscellaneous
Eoin O’Brien and James Knowlson eds., The Beckett Country: An
Exhibition for Samuel Beckett's Eightieth Birthday [catalogue of
exhibiton first held in the Library, University of Reading, May 1986]
(Dublin: Black Cat; London: Faber 1986), xxvi, 402pp., ill. [325 b&w
photos by David Davison].
Tables of Contents
Martin Esslin, ed. Samuel Beckett: A Collection of Critical Essays (Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall 1965; rep. 1987). CONTENTS: Martin Esslin, Introduction [1]; Samuel Beckett and Georges Duthuit, Three Dialogues [16]; John Fletcher, The Private Pain and the Whey of Words: A Survey of Beckett’s Verse [23]; Maurice Nadeau, Samuel Beckett: Humor and the Void [33 ]; A. J. Leventhal, The Beckett Hero [37]; Hugh Kenner, The Cartesian Centaur [52]; Jacqueline Hoefer, Watt [62]; Jean-Jacques Mayoux, Samuel Beckett and Universal Parody [77]; Dieter Wellershoff, Failure of an Attempt at De-mythologization: Samuel Beckett’s Novels [92]; Alain Robbe-Grillet, Samuel Beckett, or “Presence” in the Theatre [108 ]; Eva Metman, Reflections on Samuel Beckett’s Plays [117]; Günther Anders, Being without Time: On Becketts Play Waiting for Godot [140]; Ross Chambers, Beckett’s Brinkmanship [152]; Ruby Cohn, Philosophical Fragments in the Works of Samuel Beckett [169]; Chronology [178]; Notes on contributors [180]; Select bibliography [181-82].
[W. J. McCormack, ed.,], Beckett at 60: A Festschrift (London: Calder & Boyars 1967), 100pp., front., 4 plates (incl. ports.). CONTENTS: J. Calder, Introduction [1]; Part 1. [Reminiscences] A. J. Leventhal, The Thirties [7]; Maria Jolas, A Bloomlein for Sam [14]; Jerôme Lindon, First Meeting with Samuel Beckett [17]; Jack MacGowran, Working with Samuel Beckett [20]; Harold Hobson, The First Night of Waiting for Godot [25]; John Fletcher, In Search of Beckett [29]; Alan Schneider, Waiting for Beckett [34]; Part 2. [Criticism] Martin Esslin, Samuel Beckett’s Poems [55]; Hugh Kenner, Progress Report 1962-65 [61]; Madelaine Renaud, Beckett the Magnificant [81]; Robert Pinget, My Dear Sam [84]; Harold Pinter, Beckett [86]; Charles Monteith Personal Note [87]; Fernando Arrabal, In Connection with Samuel Beckett [88]; Philippe Staib, A Propos Samuel Beckett [89]; Aidan Higgins, Tribute [91]; Mary Hutchinson, All the Livelong Way [93]; Alan Simpson, Samuel Beckett [96]; Jocelyn Herbert, A Letter [98]; George Devine, Last Tribute [99]; Notes on Contributors [100].
Bell Gaele Chevigny, ed., Twentieth-Century Interpretations of Endgame (NJ: Prentice Hall 1969), 120pp. CONTENTS: B. G. Chevigny, Introduction [1]; Alan Schneider, Waiting for Beckett: A Personal Chronicle [14]; Martin Esslin, Samuel Beckett: The Search for the Self [22]; R. M. Goldman, Endgame and its Scorekeepers [33] ; Ruby Cohn, Endgame [40]; Hugh Kenner, Life in the Box [53]; A. Easthope, Hamm, Clov, and Dramatic Method in Endgame [61]; R. Chambers, An Approach to Endgame [71]; T. W. Adorno; Towards an Understanding of Endgame [82]; Chronology of Important Dates [115]; Notes on Contributors [117]; Sel;ected bibliography [119-20].
Melvin J. Friedman, ed., Samuel Beckett Now: Critical Approaches to his Novels, Poetry and Plays (Chicago UP 1970), 275pp.; CONTENTS: M. J. Friedman, Introduction [3]; Frederick J. Hoffman, The Elusive Ego: Beckett’s M’s [31]; Bruce Morrissette, Robbe-Grillet as a critic of Samuel Beckett [59]; Germaine Brée, The Strange World of Beckett’s “grands articulés” [73]; Edith Kern, Black Humor: The Pockets of Lemuel Gulliver and Samuel Beckett [89]; Raymond Federman, Beckettian Paradox: Who is Telling the Truth? [103]; Robert Champigny, Adventures of the First Person [119]; David Hayman, Molloy or the Quest for Meaninglessness: A Global Interpretation [129]; John Fletcher, Interpreting Molloy [157]; Lawrence E. Harvey, A Poet’s Initiation [171]; Ruby Cohn, The Laughter of Sad Sam Beckett [185]; Rosette Lamont, Beckett’s Metaphysics of Choiceless Awareness [199]; Jackson R. Bryer, Samuel Beckett: A Checklist of Criticism [219-59]
Katherine Worth, ed., Beckett the Shape Changer: A Symposium (London/Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul 1975), 227pp. CONTENTS: Katharine Worth, Introduction [1 ]; John Chalker, The Satiric Shape of Watt [19 ]; Charles Peake, The Labours of Poetical Excavation [39]; Brian Finney, Assumption to Lessness: Beckett’s Shorter Fiction [61]; Victor Sage, Innovation and Continuity in How It Is [85]; Barbara Hardy, The Dubious Consolations in Beckett’s Fiction: Art, Love and Nature [105]; Harry Cockerham, Bilingual Playwright [139]; Martin Dodsworth, Film and the Religion of Art [161 ]; Katharine Worth, The Space and the Sound in Beckett’s Theatre [183]; Select list of Beckett’s works [219-21].
Ruby Cohn, ed., Samuel Beckett: A Collection of Criticism (NY: McGraw-Hill 1975), 138pp. CONTENTS: Chronology of Beckett’s Life [vii]; Chronology of Beckett’s Work [xiii]; Ruby Cohn, Inexhaustible Beckett: An Introduction [1]; Kay Boyle, All Mankind is Us [15]; Hugh Kenner, Shades of Syntax [21]; Yasunari Takahashi, Fool’s Progress [33]; John Fletcher, Beckett as Poet [41]; H. Porter Abbott, King Laugh: Beckett’s Early Fiction [51]; Alec Reid, From Beginning to Date: Some Thoughts on the Plays of Samuel Beckett [63]; Jan Hokenson, Three Novels on Large Black Pauses [73]; Hersh Zeifman, Religious Imagery in the Plays of Samuel Beckett [85]; Ludovic Janiver, Place of Narration/Narration of Place [96]; Elin Diamond, “what? ...who? ...no! ...she!” - The Fictionalizers in Beckett’s Plays [111]; Dougald McMillan, Samuel Beckett and the Visual Arts: The Embarrassment of Allegory [121]; Select bibliography [137-38].
Kathleen McGrory & John Unterecker, eds., Yeats, Joyce, and Beckett: New Light on Three Modern Irish Writers (Lewisburg: Bucknell UP 1976). CONTENTS: Preface [9]; Notes on Contributors [15-16]; Part 1. W. B. Yeats; John Unterecker, The Yeats Landscape [photographs] [21]; Adrienne Gardner, Deirdre: Yeats’s Other Greek Tragedy [35]; John Unterecker, Interview with Anne Yeats [39]; Austin Clarke, Glimpses of W. B. Yeats [46]; Kathleen McGrory, Scholarship Frowned into Littleness? [52]; Bibl. of Works Mentioned [67]; Part 2. James Joyce; William York Tindall, The Joyce Landscape [photographs] [73]; Raymond J. Porter, The Cracked Lookingglass [87]; Margaret C. Solomon, Striking the Lost Chord: The Motif of “Waiting” in the Sirens Episode of Ulysses [92]; Nathan Halper, The Aesthetics of Joyce: James Joyce and His Fingernails [105]; Kathleen McGrory, Interview with Carola Giedion-Welcker, June 15, 1973 [110]; Bernard Benstock, James Joyce Industry: A Reassessment [118-32]; Part 3. Samuel Beckett; Kathleen McGrory, The Beckett Landscape [photographs] [135]; Vivian Mercier, Ireland/The World [147]; Sighle Kennedy, Spirals of Need: Irish Prototypes in Samuel Beckett’s Fiction [153]; Rubin Rabinovitz, The Deterioration of Outside Reality in Samuel Beckett’s Fiction [167]; Kathleen McGrory and John Unterecker, Interview with Jack MacGowran [172]; John Eichrodt and Kathleen McGrory, Chronological Bibliography of Works by William York Tindall [183-84].
Eric P. Levy, Beckett and the Voice of the Species: A Study of the Prose Fiction (Dublin: Gill & Macmillan 1980), 143pp. CHAPS: Introduction; The Pure Narrator and the Experience of Nothing; More Pricks than Kicks and Murphy: Birth of the Beckettian Narrator; Watt: Narration and Problems of Subjectivity; Mercier and Camier: Narration, Dante and the Couple; Molloy, Malone Dies, The Unnamable: Beckettian Man and the Voices of the Species; Texts for Nothing: Farewell to Beign; How It is: An Allegory for Time and Personal Identity; Looking for The Lost Ones; The Beckettian Narrator in Six Stories and Nouvelles; Fizzles. [See Commentary, infra.]
Morris Beja, S. E. Gontarski & Pierre A. Astier, eds., Samuel Beckett: Humanistic Perspectives (Columbus: Columbus: Ohio State UP 1983), 217pp. CONTENTS: Ruby Cohn, Beckett’s Theater Resonance [ ]; James Knowlson, Becketts bits of pipe [ ]; Edith Kern, Beckett’s Modernity and Medieval Affinities [ ]; Richard N. Coe, Beckett’s English [ ]; Rubin Rabinovitz, Unreliable Narrative in Murphy [ ]; H. Porter Abbott, The Harpooned Notebook: Malone Dies and the Conventions of Intercalated Narrative [ ]; Allen Thiher, Wittgenstein, Heidegger, The Unnamable, and Some Thoughts on the Status of Voice in Fiction [65-see Comm file]; Kristin Morrison, Neglected Biblical Allusions in Beckett’s Plays: Mother Pegg Once More [ ]; Yasunari Takahashi, Qu’est-ce qui arrive?: Some Structural Comparisons of Beckett’s plays and Noh [ ]; Frederik N. Smith, Fiction as Composing Process: How It Is [ ]; Judith E. Dearlove, Syntax Upended in Opposite Corners: Alterations in Beckett’s Linguistic Theories [ ]; S. E. Gontarski, Film and Formal Integrity [ ]; Hersh Zeifman, Come and Go: A Criticule [ ]; Antoni Libera, The Lost Ones: A Myth of Human History and Destiny [ ]; Enoch Brater, The Company Beckett Keeps: The Shape of Memory and One Fablist’s Decay of Lying [ ]; Nicholas Zurbrugg, Beckett, Proust, and Burroughs, and the Perils of “image warfare” [ ]; Appendix: The Ohio Impromptu Holograph and Typescripts [ ].
John Pilling, ed., Cambridge Companion to Beckett (Cambridge: CUP 1984), 249pp. CONTENTS: Notes on Contributors [ix]; Preface [xiii]; Chronology of Beckett's Life [xv]; List of Abbreviations [xxi]; A Note on Titles [xxii]; Rupert Wood, An Endgame of Aesthetics: Beckett as Essayist [1]; John Pilling, Beckett's English Fiction [I7]; Paul Davies, Three Novels and Four nouvelles: Giving up the Ghost be Born at Last [43]; Michael Worton, Waiting for Godot and Endgame: Theatre as Text [67]; Paul Lawley, Stages of Identity: From Krapp's Last Tape to Play [88]; H. Porter Abbott, Beginning Again: The Post-narrative Art of Texts for Nothing and How It Is [106]; Jonathan Kalb, The Mediated Quixote: The Radio and Television Plays, and Film [124]; Keir Elam, Dead Heads: Damnation-narration in the “dramaticules” [145]; Andrew Renton, Disabled Figures: From the Residua to Stirrings Still [167]; Roger Little, Beckett's Poems and Verse Translations or: Beckett and the Limits of Poetry [184]; Anna McMullan, Beckett as Director: The Art of Mastering Failure [196]; Ann Beer, Beckett's Bilingualism [209]; P. J. Murphy, Beckett and the Philosophers [222]; Further reading [241-44].
Maurice Harmon, ed., ‘Beckett Special Issue', Irish University Review, 14, 1 (Spring 1984). CONTENTS: Patrick Wakeling, Looking at Beckett: The Man and the Writer [3]; J. C. C. Mays, Young Beckett’s Irish Roots [18]; Roger Little, Beckett’s Mentor: Rudmose-Brown: Sketch for a Portrait [34]; David Berman, Beckett and Berkeley [42]; T. P. Dolan, Samuel Beckett’s Dramatic Use of Hiberno-English [46]; Seamus Deane, Joyce and Beckett [57]; Ben Barnes, Aspects of Directing Beckett [69]; Derek Mahon, A Noise Like Wings: Beckett’s Poetry [88]; Aidan Higgins, Foundering in Reality: Godo, Papa, Hamlet and Three Bashes at a Festchrift [93]; John Banville, Out of the Abyss [102]; Christopher Murray, Beckett Productions in Ireland: A Survey [103-25].
Enoch Brater, ed., Beckett at 80: Beckett in Context (NY: OUP 1986), 238pp. CONTENTS: Enoch Brater, Introduction: The Origins of a Dramatic Style [3]; Part 1. [Retrospectives] Ruby Cohn, Growing (up?) with Godot [13]; John Russell Brown, Beckett and the Art of the Nonplus [25]; Normand Berlin, The Tragic Pleasure of Waiting for Godot [46]; Part 2. [Perspectives] Michael Goldman, Vitality and Deadness in Beckett’s Plays [67]; Charles R. Lyons, Happy Days and Dramatic Convention [84]; Andrew Kennedy, Krapp’s Dialogue of Selves [102]; Martin Esslin, Samuel Beckett: Infinity, Eternity [110]; Keir Elam, Not I: Beckett’s Mouth and the Ars(e) Rhetorica [124]; Bernard Beckerman, Beckett and the Act of Listening [149]; Katharine Worth, Beckett’s Auditors: Not I to Ohio Impromptu [168]; James Knowlson, Ghost Trio/Geister Trio [193]; Thomas R. Whitaker, “Wham, Bam, Thank You Sam”: The Presence of Beckett [208]; Notes on Contributors [231-33].
[No ed.,], As No Other Dare Fail: For Samuel Beckett on his 80th Birthday by His Friends and Admirers (London: J. Calder; NY: Riverrun 1986), 135pp. CONTENTS: John Calder, Embarrassing Mr. Beckett [11]; Martin Esslin, Dionysos Dianoetic Laugh [15]; Tom Bishop, The Temptation of Silence [24]; James Knowlson, The Beckett Archive [30]; Aldo Tagliaferri, The Language of Paradox in Beckett [36]; Enoch Brater, Cromlechs and Voyelles [43]; Colin Duckworth, An Unpublished Letter to Beckett [50]; S. E. Gontarski, Molloy and the Reiterated Novel [57]; Dougald McMillan, Beckett at Forty: The Capital of the Ruins and “Saint-Lô” [67]; Samuel Beckett, The Capital of the Ruins [71]; Tributes from: Richard Ellman [79]; Billie Whitelaw [81]; David Warrilow [87]; Charles Monteith [89]; Siegfried Unseld[91]; Martha Fehsenfeld [96]; Barney Rosset [97]; Eoin O’Brien [99]; Sorel Etrog [101]; Barry McGovern [107]; Leonard Fenton [109]; John Fletcher [111]; John Minihan-photographs [112]; Pierre Chabert, Rehearsing Pinget’s Hypothesis [117]; Notes on Contirbutors [133-35].
S. E. Gontarski, ed., On Beckett: Essays and Criticism (NY: Grove 1986), 418pp. CONTENTS: S. E. Gontarski, Crritics and Crriticism: “Getting Known” [1]; Richard W. Seaver, Beckett and Merlin [19]; Dougald McMillan, Samuel Beckett and the Visual Arts: The Embarrassment of Allegory [29]; Wolfgang Iser, When is the End Not the End? The Idea of Fiction in Beckett [46]; Rubin Rabinovitz, Murphy and the Uses of Repetition [67]; Lawrence E. Harvey, Watt [91]; Eric P. Levy, Mercier and Camier: Narration, Dante, and the Couple [117]; Georges Bataille, Molloy’s Silence [131]; Maurice Blanchot, Where Now? Who Now? [141]; J. E. Dearlove, The Voice and Its Words: How It Is [150]; John Pilling, Shards of Ends and Odds in Prose: From Fizzles to The Lost Ones [169]; Marjorie Perloff, Between Verse and Prose: Beckett and the New Poetry [191]; Dougald McMilan, Worstward Ho [207]; Richard Toscan, MacGowran on Beckett [interview] [213]; Tom Bishop, Blin on Beckett [interview] [226]; Alan Schneider, Working with Beckett [236]; Herbert Blau, Notes from the Underground: Waiting for Godot and Endgame [255]; Walter D. Asmus, Beckett directs Godot [280]; Ruby Cohn, Beckett Directs: Endgame and Krapp’s Last Tape [291]; S. E. Gontarski, Literary Allusions in Happy Days [308]; Paul Lawley, Counterpoint, Absence, and the Medium in Beckett’sNot I [325]; Walter D. Asmus, Rehearsal Notes for the German Premiere of Beckett’s That Time and Footfalls [335]; James Knowlson, Footfalls [350]; Martin Esslin, Samuel Beckett and the Art of Radio [360]; Enoch Brater, Light, Sound, Movement, and Action in Beckett’s Rockaby [385]; Pierre Astier, Beckett’s Ohio Impromptu: A View from the Isle of Swans [394]; S. E. Gontarski, Quad and Catastrophe [404]; Victor Bockris, [editor] Burroughs with Beckett in Berlin [409]; Notes on Contributors [415-18].
Terence Brown & Nicholas Grene, eds., ‘Beckett at 80: A Birthday Tribute', Hermathena, 141 (Winter 1986). CONTENTS: W. A. Watts, Preface [3]; A. Norman Jeffares Foreword [7]; Derek Mahon, “An image from Beckett [10]; Alec Reid, Impact and Parable in Beckett: A First Encounter with Not I [12]; W. J. McCormack, Seeing Darkly: Notes on T. W. Adorno and Samuel Beckett [22]; Declan Kiberd, Beckett and Kavanagh: Comparatively Absurd? [45]; Terence Brown, Some Young Doom: Beckett and the Child [56]; Brendan Kennelly, A Small Success [65]; Vivian Mercier, Poet and Mathematician [66]; Anthony Roche, Beckett’s contexts [72-79].
James Acheson & Kateryna Arthur, eds., Beckett's Later Fiction and Drama: Texts for Company (London: Macmillan; NY: St. Martin’s 1987), 206pp. CONTENTS: Melvin J. Friedman, Foreword [vii-xii]; Notes on the Contributors [xv]; Robert Wilcher, “Out of the Dark”: Beckett’s Texts for Radio [1]; Katharine Worth, Past into Future: Krapp’s Last Tape to Breath [18]; Martin Esslin, Towards the Zero of Language [35]; Rubin Rabinovitz, The Self Contained: Beckett’s Fiction in the 1960s [50]; Brian Finney, Still to Worstward Ho: Beckett’s Prose Fiction since The Lost Ones [65]; Charles R. Lyons, Beckett’s Fundamental Theatre: The Plays from Not I to What Where [80]; Dougald McMillan, Human Reality and Dramatic Method: Catastrophe, Not I and the Unpublished Plays [98]; James Acheson, The Shape of Ideas: That Time and Footfalls [115]; Kateryna Arthur, Texts for Company [136]; Nicholas Zurbrugg, Ill Seen, Ill Said and the Sense of an Ending [145]; Enoch Brater, Voyelles, Cromlechs and the Special (W)rites of Worstward Ho [160]; Colin Duckworth, Beckett’s new Godot [175]; S. E. Gontarski, Company for Company: Androgyny and Theatricality in Samuel Beckett’s Prose [193-202].
Harold Bloom, ed., Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot (NY: Chelsea House 1987), 131pp. CONTENTS: Editor’s Note [vii]; Harold Bloom, Introduction [1]; John Fletcher, Bailing Out the Silence [11]; Martin Esslin, The Search for the Self [23]; Ruby Cohn, Waiting [41]; Hugh Kenner, Waiting for Godot [53]; Richard Gilman, The Waiting Since [67]; Bert O. States, The Language of Myth [79]; Eric Gans, Beckett and the Problem of Modern Culture [95]; Edith Kern, Beckett’s Modernity and Medieval Affinities [111]; Chronology [119]; Notes on Contributors [121]; Bibliography [123-24].
Ruby Cohn, ed., Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot: A Casebook (London: Macmillan 1987). CONTENTS: Ruby Cohn, Introduction [9]; Part 1. [The Stage] Eric Bentley, An Anti-play [23-24]; Marcel Frère, Roger Blin’s Production of “En Attendant Godot (1953) [24]; Mary Benson, Blin on Beckett [26-28]; Elmar Tophoven, A French Dramatist from Ireland [28-30]; Peter Hall, Waiting for What: First London Production (1955) [30]; Philip Hope-Wallace, Two Evenings with Two Tramps [32-33]; Alan Simpson, First Dublin Production (1956) [33]; Alan Schneider, Miami Production (1956) [37-43]; Jack Anderson, Mink-Clad Audience Disappointed: Miami (1956) [43], Antonia Rodríguez-Gago, Beckett in Spain: Madrid (1955) and Barcelona (1956) [45-46]; Friedrich Luft, Beckett Produces Beckett: West Berlin (1975) [46-48]; James Knowlson, Beckett’s Production Notebooks [48]; Dougald McMillan, The Music in “Waiting for Godot” [53]; Dan Sullivan, Waking up “Godot”: Los Angeles (1977) [57-59]; Kenneth Rea, “En Attendant Godot”: Avignon (1978) [59-60]; Mel Gussow, South African Version at New Haven (1980) [60-62]; Anne C. Murch, Icons for a Theatre Delighting in Quoting Itself [62-67]; Linda Ben-Zvi, All Mankind is Us: “Godot” in Israel (1985) [67-70]; Peyton Glass III, Beckett, Axial Man [70-76]; John Fletcher, The Play’s Balance [76-78]; Part 2. [The Study] Colin Duckworth, Godot: Genesis and Composition [81-86]; Hersh Zeifman, The Alterable Whey of Words: The Play’s Texts [86-95], Anselm Atkins, The Structure of Lucky’s Speech [95-96]; Harry Cockerham, Bilingual Playwright [96-104]; Bert O. States, Plots [104-09]; Raymond Williams, A Modern Tragedy [109-11]; Richard Keller Simon, Beckett, Comedy and the Critics [111]; David Bradby, Beckett’s Shapes [114-17]; David H. Hesla, Beckett’s Philosophy [117-21]; Jacques Dubois, Beckett and Ionesco [121-30]; Hans Meyer, Brecht’s Drums, A Dog and Godot [130-35]; Katherine Worth, Irish Beckett [135-42]; Yasunari Takahashi, Qu’est-ce qui arrive?: Beckett and Noh [142-45]; Dina Sherzer, De-Construction in Godot [145-50]; Maria Minich Brewer, A Semiosis of Waiting [150-55]; Peter Gidal, Dialogue and Dialectic in Godot [155-58]; James Mays, Allusion and Echo in Godot [158-67]; Part 3. [At Large] Martin Esslin, The Universal Image [171]; Stanley E. Gontarski, War Experiences and Godot [175-76]; Kay Boyle, All Mankind is Us [176-80]; Sean O’Casey, Not Waiting for Godot [181]; Sidney Homan, Playing Prisons [181]; Eric Gabs, Beckett and the Problem of Modern Culture [184-90]; Alec Reid, An Act of Love [190-96]; Christopher Mosey, The Ulitmate Test [196]; Chronology of Beckett’s Works [197]; Select bibliography [201]; Notes on Contributors [203-05].
Harold Bloom, ed., Samuel Beckett’s Endgame [Modern Critical Interpretations] (NY: Chelsea House 1988), 160pp. CONTENTS: Editor’s note [vii]; Harold Bloom, Introduction [1]; Theodor W. Adorno, Trying to Understand Endgame [9]; Hugh Kenner, Life in the Box [41]; Antony Easthope, Hamm, Clov, and the Dramatic Method in Endgame [49]; Stanley Cavell, Ending the Waiting Game: A Reading of Beckett’s Endgame [59]; Richard Gilman, Beckett [79]; Paul Lawley, Symbolic Structure and Creative Obligation in Endgame [87]; Ruby Cohn, The Play that was Rewritten: Fin de partie [111]; Sidney Homan, Endgame: The Playwright Completes Himself [123]; Chronology [147]; Notes on Contributors [149]; Bibliography [151-54].
Robin J. Davis & Lance St. John Butler, eds., “Make Sense Who May”: Essays on Samuel Beckett's Later Works (Gerrards Cross: Colin Smythe 1988; 1989), 175pp. CONTENTS: Robin J. Davis & Lance St. John Butler, Introduction [vii]; Paul Lawley, The Difficult Birth: An Image of Utterance in Beckett [1]; Rosemary Pountney, Less = More: Developing Ambiguity in the Drafts of Come and Go [11]; Karen L. Laughlin, Seeing is Perceiving: Becketts Later Plays and the Theory of Audience Response [20]; Andrew Kennedy, Mutations of the Soliloquy: Not I to Rockaby [30]; Lois Oppenheim, Anonymity and Individuation: The Interrelation of Two Linguistic Functions in Not I and Rockaby [36]; Mary A. Doll, Walking and Rocking: Ritual Acts in Footfalls and Rockaby [46]; R. Thomas Simone, Beckett’s Other Trilogy: Not I, Footfalls and Rockaby [56]; Jane Alison Hale, Perspective in Rockaby [66]; Monique Nagem, Know Happiness: Irony in Ill Seen Ill Said [77]; Antoni Libera, Reading That Time [91]; Kathleen O’Gorman, The Speech Act in Beckett’s Ohio Impromptu [108]; Annamaria Sportelli, Make sense who may: A Study of Catastrophe and What Where [120]; Hersh Zeifman, Catastrophe and Dramatic Setting [129]; Robert Sandarg, A Political Perspective on Catastrophe [137]; Phyllis Carey, The Quad Pieces: A Screen for the Unseeable [145]; Notes [151]; Bibliography [167]; Notes on Contributors [167]; Notes on the Editors [171-72].
Lance St. John Butler & Robin J. Davis, eds., Rethinking Beckett: A Collection of Critical Essays (Basingstoke: Macmillan 1990), 207pp. CONTENTS: Notes on the Editors and Contributors [vii]; Steven Connor, What? where?: Presence and Repetition in Beckett’s Theatre [1]; Angela Moorjani, Beckett’s Devious Deictics [20]; Rubin Rabinovitz, Repetition and Underlying Meanings in Samuel Beckett’s Trilogy [31]; Kevin J. H. Dettmar, The Figure in Beckett’s Carpet: Molloy and the Assault on Metaphor [68]; Barbara Trieloff, “Babel of Silence”: Becketts Post-trilogy Prose Articulated [89]; Paola Zaccaria, Fizzles by Samuel Beckett: The Failure of the Dream of a Never-ending Verticality [105]; Charles Krance, Worstward ho and On-words: Writing To(wards) the Point [124]; Ed Jewinski, Beckett’s Company, Post-structuralism, and Mimetalogique [141]; Michael E. Mooney, Watt: Samuel Beckett’s Sceptical Fiction [160]; Gottfried Büttner, A New Approach to Watt [169]; Stephen Barker, Conspicuous Absence: Tracé and Power in Beckett’s Drama [181-205].
Enoch Brater & Ruby Cohn, eds., Around the Absurd: Essays on Modern and Postmodern Drama (Michigan UP 1990), 316pp. CONTENTS: Ruby Cohn, Introduction: Around the Absurd [1]; Jan Kott, Dagny and Lulu [11]; Katharine Worth, Maeterlinck in the Light of the Absurd [19]; Linda Ben-Zvi, O’Neill and Absurdity [33]; James Knowlson, Tradition and Innovation in Ionesco’s La Cantatrice Chauve [57]; H. Porter Abbott, Late Modernism: Samuel Beckett and the Art of the Oeuvre [73]; Charles R. Lyons, Beckett, Shakespeare, and the Making of Theory [97]; Benedict Nightingale, Harold Pinter/Politics [129]; Bernard F. Dukore, Peter Barnes and the Problem of Goodness [155]; Hersh Zeifman, A Trick of the Light: Tom Stoppard’s Hapgood and Postabsurdist Theater [175]; Toby Silverman Zinman, Hen in a Foxhouse: The Absurdist Plays of Maria Irene Fornes [203]; Rosette C. Lamont, The Internationalization of the Paris Stage [221]; Theodore Shank, Framing Actuality: Thirty Years of Experimental Theater, 1959-89 [239]; Bernard Weiner, The Absurd, To and Fro [273]; Herbert Blau, The Oversight of Ceaseless Eyes [279]; Enoch Brater, After the Absurd: Rethinking Realism and a Few Other Isms [293]; Notes on Contributors [303-06].
Linda Ben-Zvi, ed., Women in Beckett: Performance and Critical Perspectives (Illinois UP 1990), 260pp. CONTENTS: Linda Ben-Zvi, Introduction [ix-xviii]; Part 1. [Acting Beckett’s Women] Billie Whitelaw interviewed by Linda Ben-Zvi [3]; Dame Peggy Ashcroft interviewed by Katharine Worth [11]; Madeleine Renaud, Delphine Seyrig, interviewed by Pierre Chabert [15]; Eva Katharina Schultz, Recollections of the Rehearsals for Happy Days with Samuel Beckett [22]; Nancy Illig, [untitled] [24]; Gudren Genest, Memories of Samuel Beckett in the Rehearsals for Endgame, 1967 [27]; Shivaun O’Casey interviewed by Rosette Lamont [29]; Aideen O’Kelly interviewed by Rosette Lamont [35]; Hanna Marron interviewed by Linda Ben-Zvi [41]; Irena Jun interviewed by Antoni Libera [47]; Brenda Bynum interviewed by Lois Overbeck [51]; Martha Fehsenfeld, [untitled] [55]; Part 2. [Re-acting to Beckett’s Women] Martin Esslin, Patterns of Rejection: Sex and Love in Beckett’s Universe [61]; James Acheson, Beckett and the Heresy of Love [68]; Kristin Morrison, “Meet in Paradize”: Beckett’s Shavian Women [81]; Susan Brienza, Clods, Whores, and Bitches: Misogyny in Beckett’s Early Fiction [91]; Rubin Rabinovitz, Stereoscopic or Stereotypic: Characterization in Beckett’s Fiction [106]; Carol Helmstetter Cantrell, Cartesian Man and the Woman Reader: A Feminist Approach to Beckett’s Molloy [117]; Angela B. Moorjani, The Magna Mater Myth in Beckett’s Fiction: Subtext and Subversion [134]; Lawrence Graver, Homage to the Dark Lady: Ill Seen Ill Said [142]; Charles R. Lyons, Male or Female Voice: The Significance of the Gender of the Speaker in Beckett’s Late Fiction and Drama [150]; Ruby Cohn, The Femme Fatale on Beckett’s Stage [162]; Shari Benstock, The Transformational Grammar of Gender in Beckett’s Dramas [172]; Peter Gidal, Beckett and Sexuality (Terribly Short Version) [187]; Ann Wilson, “Her Lips Moving”: The Castrated Voice of Not I [190]; Dina Sherzer, Portrait of a Woman: The Experience of Marginality in Not I [201]; Elin Diamond, Speaking Parisian: Beckett and French Feminism [208]; Lois Oppenheim, Female Subjectivity in Not I and Rockaby [217]; Rosette Lamont, Beckett’s Eh Joe: Lending an Ear to the Anima [228]; Katharine Worth, Women in Beckett’s Radio and Television Plays [236]; Linda Ben-Zvi, Not I: Through a Tube Starkly [243]; Appendix [249]; Notes on Contributors [253-57].
Joseph H. Smith, ed., The World of Samuel Beckett (Baltimore/London: Johns Hopkins UP 1991), 226pp. CONTENTS: Joseph H. Smith, Introduction [xv-xxiv] Herbert Blau, Quaquaquaqua: The Babel of Beckett [1]; Mary F. Catanzaro, Enough or Too Little?: Voicings of Desire and Discontent in Beckett’s “Enough” [16]; Nicholas Zurbrugg, Seven Types of Postmodernity: Several Types of Samuel Beckett [30]; Angela Moorjani, A Cryptanalysis of Beckett’s Molloy [53]; Robert Winer, The Whole Story [73]; John H. Lutterbie, “Tender Mercies”: Subjectivity and Subjection in Samuel Beckett’s Not I [86]; Anthony Kubiak, Post Apocalypse without Figures: The Trauma of Theater in Samuel Beckett [107]; Stephen Barker, Recovering the Néant: Language and the Unconscious in Beckett [125]; Bennett Simon, The Fragmented Self, the Reproduction of the Self, and Reproduction in Beckett and in the Theater of the Absurd [157]; Jon Erickson, Self-objectification and Preservation in Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape [181]; Joseph H. Smith, Notes on Krapp, Endgame, and “Applied” Psychoanalysis [195]; Martin Esslin, Telling It How It Is: Beckett and the Mass Media [204]; Herbert Blau, The Less Said [217-19].
S. E. Wilmer, ed., Beckett in Dublin (Dublin: Lilliput Press 1992). CONTENTS: S. E. Wilmer, Introduction [1]; James Knowlson, Beckett as Director [7]; Jean Maritn, Creating Godot [25]; S. E. Gontarski, Working through Beckett [33]; Linda Ben-Zvi, Feminine Focus in Beckett [55]; Katherine Worth, Beckett’s Ghosts [62]; Declan Kiberd, Beckett and the Life to Come [75]; Rosemary Poutney, Beckett’s Stagecraft [85]; Steven Connor, Over Samuel Beckett’s Dead Body [100]; Georges Belmont and John Calder, Remembering Sam [111]; Brendan Kennelly, The Four Percenter [129]; J. C. C. Mays, Irish Beckett: A Borderline Instance [133]; Notes on Contributors [147-8].
John Pilling & Mary Bryden, eds., The Ideal Core of the Onion: Reading Beckett Archives (Reading: Beckett International Foundation 1992). CONTENTS: John Pilling, Preface [v-vii]; John Pilling, From a (W)horoscope to Murphy [1]; Lionel Kelly, Beckett’s Human Wishes [21]; Mary Bryden, Figures of Golgoytha: Beckett’s Pinioned People [45]; P. J. Murphy, On First Looking into Beckett’s The Voice [63]; Steven Connor, Between Theatre and Theory: Long Observation of the Ray [79]; Andrew Renton, Worstward Ho and the End(s) of Representation [99]; Paul Davies, Stirrings Still: The Disembodiment of Western Tradition [136-51].
S. E. Gontarski, ed., The Beckett Studies Reader (Gainsville: University Press of Florida 1993), 238pp. CONTENTS: S. E. Gontarski, The Journal of Beckett Studies, The First Fifteen Years: An Introduction [1]; John Pilling, Beckett’s Proust [9]; S. E. Gontarski, “Birth Astride of a Grave”: Samuel Beckett’s Act Without Words I [29]; Jeri L. Kroll, Belacqua as Artist and Lover: “What a Misfortune” [35]; Thomas J. Cousineau, Watt: Language as Interdiction and Consolation [64]; James Acheson, Murphy’s Metaphysics [78]; Paul Lawley, Embers: An Interpretation [94]; Katherine Kelly, The Orphic Mouth in Not I [121]; J. D. O’Hara, Jung and the “Molloy” Narrative [129]; James Hansford, “Imagination Dead Imagine”: The Imagination and its Context [146]; Heath Lees, Watt: Music, Tuning and Tonality [167]; Anne C. Murch, Quoting from Godot: Trends in Contemporary French Theater [186]; James Hansford, “Imaginative Transactions” in “La Falaise” [203]; Ileana Marcoulesco, Beckett and the Temptation of Solipsism [214]; Bibliography of Books, Portions of Which First Appeared in the Journal of Beckett Studies [227]; Notes on Contributors [229-30].
Enoch Brater, ed., The Theatrical Gamut: Notes for a Post-Beckettian Stage (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan 1995), 304pp. CONTENTS: Enoch Brater, Preface [ix-xi]; John Russell Brown, Back to Bali [1]; Bernard Dort, Training the French Actor: From Exercise to Experiment [21]; Antonia Rodriguez-Gago, Molly’s “Happy Nights” and Winnie’s “Happy Days” [29]; Martin Esslin, Beckett’s German Context [41]; Yasunari Takahashi, Memory Inscribed in the Body: Krapp’s Last Tape and the Noh Play Izutsu [51]; Carla Locatelli, Delogocentering Silence: Beckett’s Ultimate Unwording [67]; H. Porter Abbott, Consorting with Spirits: The Arcane Craft of Beckett’s Later Drama [91]; Hersh Zeifman, All my Sons after the Fall: Arthur Miller and Rage for Order [107]; Elin Diamond, “The Garden is a Mess”: Maternal Space in Bowles, Glaspell, Robins [121]; John Orr, Paranoia and Celebrity in American Dramatic Writing: 1970-90 [141]; Bill Coco, The Dramaturgy of the Dream Play: Monologues by Breuer, Chaikin, Shepard [159]; Gerry McCarthy, “Codes from a Mixed-up Machine”: The Disintegrating Actor in Beckett, Shepard, and Surprisingly, Shakespeare [171]; Linda Ben-Zvi, “Aroun the Worl”: The Signifyin(g) Theater of Suzan-Lori Parks [189]; Janelle Reinelt, Is the English Epic Over? [209]; Sue-Ellen Case, Acting out the State Agenda: Berlin, 1993 [223]; Jin Eigo, Sitelines: A Ground for Theater [255]; Herbert Blau, Afterthought from the Vanishing Point: Theater at the End of Real [279]; Joseph Chaikin, Afterword [299]; Notes on Contributors [301-04].
Mary Junker, Beckett: The Irish Dimension (Dublin: Wolfhound 1995), 199pp. CHAPS: Understanding Beckett; [Beckett's Literary and Cultural Heritage]; The Joycean Influence; The Irish literary Tradition; The French Literary Tradition; His Protestant Heritage; [The Irish Dimension in the Five Selected Plays] Location; Evocation; Language; personal mythology; poetic diction; meaning and mutability; [Waiting for Godot] Production and Reception; Location; Evocation; Language; arcane language; Irish language; Hiberno-English; [The Text and the Technique; Godot: the mystery and the mirage; The word Godot is made flesh; the flesh is made word; [All That Fall] Location; Evocation; The gentility syndrome; Language; [Krapp's Last Tape] Synopsis; Productions and Reception .... [Eh Joe] [That Time] Conclusion. [see Commentary, infra.]
Lois Oppenheim, ed., Directing Beckett (Ann Arbor: University of Michegan Press 1994). CONTENTS: Lois Oppenheim, Introduction [1]; Alan Schneider, Alan Schneider Directs Rockaby [transcript of extracts from audiotape] [13]; Part 1. Lois Oppenheim, Introduction to Interviews [21]; all interviews with Lois Oppenheim; Frederick Neumann [25]; Walter Asmus [40]; Herbert Blau [48]; Pierre Chabert [66]; Edward Albee [80]; Jan Jönson [92]; Antoni Libera [101]; Joseph Chaikin [124]; Gregory Mosher [131]; JoAnne Akalaitis [135]; Part 2. Lois Oppenheim, Introduction to Essays [141]; Robert Scanlan, Performing Voices: Notes from Stagings of Beckett’s Work [145]; Gildas Bourdet, Fizzle [155]; Carey Perloff, Three Women and a Mound: Directing Happy Days [161]; Xerxes Mehta, Ghosts [170]; Everett C. Frost, A “Fresh Go” for the Skull: Directing All That Fall, Samuel Beckett’s Play for Radio [186]; Colin Duckworth, Directing Beckett “Down Under” [220]; Ilan Ronen, Waiting for Godot as Political Theatre [239]; Gerry McCarthy, Emptying the Theatre: on Directing the Plays of Samuel Beckett [250]; Eve Adamson, Beckett in Repertory [268]; Robert McNamara, on Directing Beckett: In and Out of Ireland [277]; Part 3. [Appendixes], 1. Letters from Samuel Beckett to Roger Blin [295]; 2. Interview with Roger Blin by Joan Stevens [301]; 3. “On Play and Other Plays”: Lecture by Alan Schneider [315]; Notes on contributors [319-20].
Lois Oppenheim & Marius Buning, eds., Beckett On and On ... [Further papers of 2nd International Samuel Beckett Conference, Hague, April 1992] (London: Associated UP 1996), 259pp. CONTENTS: Lois Oppenheim, Introduction [7]; Part. 1. Leslie Hill, Gender and Genre: “Fuck life”: Rockaby, Sex, and the Body [19]; Andreas Bjørnerud, Beckett’s Model of Masculinity: Male Hysteria in Not I [27]; Mary Bryden, Gender in Beckett’s Music Machine [36]; Johanneke Van Slooten, Beckett’s Irish Rhythm Embodied in His Polyphony [44]; John Pilling, A Short Statement with Long Shadows: Watt’s Arsene and His Kind(s) [61]; Frank Matton, Beckett’s Trilogy and the Limits of Autobiography [69]; Angela Moorjani, Mourning, Schopenhauer, and Beckett’s Art of Shadows [83]; Wanda Balzano, Re-mythologizing Beckett: The Metaphors of Metafiction in How It Is [102]; Elizabeth Klaver, Entering Beckett’s Postmodern Space [111]; Part. 2. Carla Locatelli, Textuality and Theatricality: “My Life Natural Order More or Less in the Present More or Less”: Textual Immanence as the Textual Impossible in Beckett’s Works [127]; Gerry McCarthy, Rehearsals for the End of Time: Indeterminacy and Performance in Beckett [147]; Robert Scanlan, The Proper Handling of Beckett’s Plays [160]; David J. Gordon, Au Contraire: The Question of Beckett’s Bilingual Text [164]; Harry Vandervlist, “A Voice from Elsewhere”: Impossible Survivals and the Annihilating Power of Language in Beckett’s Fiction [178]; Dorothee Ostmeier, Dramatizing Silence: Beckett’s Shorter Plays [187]; Li-Ling Tseng, Undoing and Doing: Allegories of Writing in the Trilogy [199]; Kirill O. Thompson, Beckett’s Dramatic Vision and Classical Taoism [212]; Mariko Hori Tanaka, Special Features of Beckett Performances in Japan [226]; Hersh Zeifman, The Syntax of Closure: Beckett’s Late Drama [240]; Notes on Contributors [255-59].
Bruce Stewart, ed., Beckett and Beyond [Princess Grace Irish Library Series No. 9] (Gerrards Cross: Colin Smythe 1999), 318pp. CONTENTS: Bruce Stewart, Introduction [I]; Tadhg O’Sulllivan, Opening Address [ii]; Antony Cronin, Opening [vi]; Edward Beckett, Opening Address [vii]; Hersh Zeifman, Opening Address [viii]; James Acheson, Beckett’s Film, Berkeley, and Schopenhauer [1]; Linda Ben-Zvi, Feminine Focus in Beckett [10]; Normand Berlin, Beyond Beckett = Before Beckett [16]; Enoch Brater, Acts of Enunciation in All That Fall [23]; Marius Buning, The Play of Negativity in the Beckettian Text [32]; Lance St John Butler, Samuel Beckett’s End, or The Future Perfect [41]; Gottfried Büttner, Samuel Beckett Looked at as a Modern Initiate [42]; Genèvieve Chevalier, Pacing Absence: Beckett’s Characters as Quantity Surveyors in Insignificance [53]; Ruby Cohn, An Abstract [61]; Thomas Cousineau, Beneath Representation: On Staging Beckett’s Plays Anti-Œdipal Tendencies in the Trilogy [70]; Kevin Dettmar, The Joyce that Beckett Built [78]; Colin Duckworth, Beckett’s Theatre: Beyond the Stage Space [93]; Colin Duckworth, Murphy’s Return [102]; Martha Fehsenfeld and Lois More Overbeck, The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett: Windows on the Work [103]; Jack E. Frish, Beckett and Havel: A Personification of Silence [115]; Peter Gidal, Sexlessness & Meaninglessness in Time in Beckett [127]; Stanley E. Gontarski, A Hat Is Not a Shoe: The Theatrical Notebooks of Samuel Beckett and Postmodernist Theories of Texts and Textuality [129]; Barbara Hardy, Samuel Beckett: Adapting Objects & and Adapting to Objects [145]; Marek Kedzierski, The Space of Absence: Image and Voice in Beckett’s Later Plays [155]; Andrew Kennedy, No Beyond All to End [163]; Adele King, Camus and Beckett: Against Patriarchy, L’Etranger, Molloy & En Attendant Godot [169]; James Knowlson, “My Texts are in a Terrible Mess” [176]; Charles Krance, French for Company [187]; Carla Locatelli, Samuel Beckett’s Obligation to Express : From a Mythology of Demystification to the Utterance of Better Failures [193]; Barry McGovern, Well, Well, so There’s an Audience in the Plays of Samuel Beckett [205]; John Pilling, A Mermaid Made Over: Beckett’s Text and John Ford [211]; Giuseppina Restivo, Caliban/Clov and Leopardi’s Boy: Beckett and Postmodernism [217]; Antonia Rodriguez-Gago, Beckett’s Voices in Spanish: Translation as an Aspect of Adaptation [231]; Annamaria Sportelli, Beyond the Absurd [239]; Aldo Tagliaferri, Ill Seen Ill Said: A Sacrificial Workshop [246]; Katherine Worth, Protean Beckett: Adaptations and Extensions [255]; Hersh Zeifman, From That Time to No Time: Closure in Beckett’s Drama [260]; Appendix One: The Conference Programme [268]; Appendix Two: A List of Participants [270-71].
Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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