This thesis argues that desire is a major theme in Samuel Beckett's dramatic works. Central to our analysis is Jacques Lacan's concept of the Desire for the Other, as the outcome of the human subject's division. We will investigate how desire is expressed at the level of Beckett's characters' utterance. The characters' attempts at and inability to achieve a reconciliation with their speech correlate with the impossibility of reunifying Lacan's split subject. The first part of our discussion focuses upon desire-as-paradox--the lack of will to desire and the continuation of desire--in Not I, Footfalls and Krapp's Last Tape, whereas Rockaby and That Time are indicative of the regression of desire leading toward the characters' death. The secon...
The article weaves Lacanian psychoanalysis with narratology. It explores the Beckettian logic of nar...
When one thinks of the stage in Beckett’s plays, one tends to see it as empty or in the process of b...
This thesis reconciles the contradiction between the two ways of reading Beckett’s Waiting for Godot...
This book challenges critical approaches that argue for Giacomo Leopardi’s and Samuel Beckett’s pess...
In this thesis I will discuss my findings of applying Lacanian psychoanalysis to Samuel Beckett’s sh...
This thesis approaches Samuel Beckett’s late prose works through the Lacanian question of Real writi...
Though Beckett’s name is closely associated with fiction and drama in the world of contemporary art ...
This thesis focuses on three plays written by Samuel Beckett: Play, Not I and Footfalls. Corporealit...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis focuses on the ways in which Samuel Beckett chal...
This thesis examines expressions of lack and desire in three of Samuel Beckett's early texts. This e...
This thesis responds to a long-established consensus around the work of Samuel Beckett: namely, that...
This study explores Beckett’s use of physical movements in his plays as part of a strategy to escape...
Beckett’s “First Love” is in part a literary experiment, being one of his first texts of length writ...
Building on the dialectical tension between neuro-cognitivism and Lacanian psychoanalysis, this arti...
The current study aims to investigate James Joyce’s Exiles in light of Jacques Lacan’s theory of des...
The article weaves Lacanian psychoanalysis with narratology. It explores the Beckettian logic of nar...
When one thinks of the stage in Beckett’s plays, one tends to see it as empty or in the process of b...
This thesis reconciles the contradiction between the two ways of reading Beckett’s Waiting for Godot...
This book challenges critical approaches that argue for Giacomo Leopardi’s and Samuel Beckett’s pess...
In this thesis I will discuss my findings of applying Lacanian psychoanalysis to Samuel Beckett’s sh...
This thesis approaches Samuel Beckett’s late prose works through the Lacanian question of Real writi...
Though Beckett’s name is closely associated with fiction and drama in the world of contemporary art ...
This thesis focuses on three plays written by Samuel Beckett: Play, Not I and Footfalls. Corporealit...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis focuses on the ways in which Samuel Beckett chal...
This thesis examines expressions of lack and desire in three of Samuel Beckett's early texts. This e...
This thesis responds to a long-established consensus around the work of Samuel Beckett: namely, that...
This study explores Beckett’s use of physical movements in his plays as part of a strategy to escape...
Beckett’s “First Love” is in part a literary experiment, being one of his first texts of length writ...
Building on the dialectical tension between neuro-cognitivism and Lacanian psychoanalysis, this arti...
The current study aims to investigate James Joyce’s Exiles in light of Jacques Lacan’s theory of des...
The article weaves Lacanian psychoanalysis with narratology. It explores the Beckettian logic of nar...
When one thinks of the stage in Beckett’s plays, one tends to see it as empty or in the process of b...
This thesis reconciles the contradiction between the two ways of reading Beckett’s Waiting for Godot...