This chapter accounts for the impossible, yet desired ending of returning to re-experience a particular event; as examples of study, it uses T. J. Clark’s The Sight of Death, Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape as well as Pina Bausch’s Béla Bartók’s Opera: Duke Bluebeard’s Castle in order to account for a simultaneous longing and fear to end the process of returning. Such experience aims to comprehend the uncontainable event, to finish its unfinished business. The unresolved event demands a return to it, in order to be able to say, finally, but not once and for all, farewell to farewell. The following writing argues that endings, like performance itself, escape from us, forming an experience that is not quite yet and that specific uses of repetitio...
The paper explores the possible endings of narratives in the classical European novel from Cervantes...
The poems in Well of Endings are the result of three years scribbling within the context of a typica...
It is no exaggeration to say that the pleasure of reading a narrative lies in anticipating an ending...
The way a musical composition ends is a critical moment: the musical ordering stops while the daily ...
Samuel Beckett's popular play Endgame, depicts a prison-like room with two windows that show a ...
This dissertation examines the problem of narrative closure in Hawthorne's major romances in the lig...
What makes a good ending? How do we know when something ends? In performance, it is difficult to cha...
In this book, Walter Foreman studies the closing scenes of Shakespeare’s tragedies, considering the ...
206 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1980.A text will achieve closure i...
In a film text, just as in any other narrative, the ending represents a crucial moment in which an e...
How does a writer, a researcher, an artist, or a musician know when a piece of work is finished? And...
In Aristotle?s conception of tragedy, tragedy?s utility lies in its ability to purge the audience of...
This chapter provides a critical discourse between Jones and Pinchbeck about the making of The Trilo...
This essay is part of a larger project that investigates the ways in which Burney's endings (in her ...
Any contemporary discussion on Beckett and the mind cannot sidestep the so-called ‘cognitive turn’ i...
The paper explores the possible endings of narratives in the classical European novel from Cervantes...
The poems in Well of Endings are the result of three years scribbling within the context of a typica...
It is no exaggeration to say that the pleasure of reading a narrative lies in anticipating an ending...
The way a musical composition ends is a critical moment: the musical ordering stops while the daily ...
Samuel Beckett's popular play Endgame, depicts a prison-like room with two windows that show a ...
This dissertation examines the problem of narrative closure in Hawthorne's major romances in the lig...
What makes a good ending? How do we know when something ends? In performance, it is difficult to cha...
In this book, Walter Foreman studies the closing scenes of Shakespeare’s tragedies, considering the ...
206 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1980.A text will achieve closure i...
In a film text, just as in any other narrative, the ending represents a crucial moment in which an e...
How does a writer, a researcher, an artist, or a musician know when a piece of work is finished? And...
In Aristotle?s conception of tragedy, tragedy?s utility lies in its ability to purge the audience of...
This chapter provides a critical discourse between Jones and Pinchbeck about the making of The Trilo...
This essay is part of a larger project that investigates the ways in which Burney's endings (in her ...
Any contemporary discussion on Beckett and the mind cannot sidestep the so-called ‘cognitive turn’ i...
The paper explores the possible endings of narratives in the classical European novel from Cervantes...
The poems in Well of Endings are the result of three years scribbling within the context of a typica...
It is no exaggeration to say that the pleasure of reading a narrative lies in anticipating an ending...