What would modernist fiction look like if it were mindless and had no access to mental states? While modernism is often understood as a psychological turn inward, this article shows how introspective psychology competed against other psychological discourses—and how writers such as Samuel Beckett theorized a modernism without introspection. In his essays “Dante … Bruno … Vico … Joyce” (1929) and Proust (1930), Beckett argued that the psychological interiority of high modernist fiction could be attributed to nonmental and behavioristic causes. And in his novel Murphy (1936), he suggested that novelistic form belied the unknowability of mental states. To Beckett, the novel's ability to know other minds was itself fictional; the representation...
Literary historians have long made an issue of the extent to which the modernist novel broke with co...
Literary historians have long made an issue of the extent to which the modernist novel broke with co...
This study conceives the modernist novel as arising from a problem in genre. The end of the nineteen...
The paper focuses on the modernist psychological novel as a genre that dramatizes the radical trans...
“Behaviorism and Literary Modernity, 1913-2009”constructs a history of twentieth-century literature ...
The modernist novel displays a recurrent interest in the limits of perceptual and cognitive facultie...
This thesis argues that the popular characterization of high modernist fiction as esoteric, elitist,...
This paper presents an on-going PhD project that is part of the effort to reassess the alleged “inwa...
This dissertation argues that a growing failure to distinguish mind from machine induces a state of ...
Samuel Beckett is categorized as an absurdist dramatist. Martin Esslin in his book The Theatre of Ab...
This dissertation argues that a growing failure to distinguish mind from machine induces a state of ...
Braiding together strands of literary, phenomenological and art historical reflection, Modernism and...
Samuel Beckett is categorized as an absurdist dramatist. Martin Esslin in his book The Theatre of Ab...
This project examines the accomplishment of Samuel Beckett, particularly in his plays, in discoverin...
Can a novel exhibit signs of consciousness? If so, how does a writer express such characteristics? W...
Literary historians have long made an issue of the extent to which the modernist novel broke with co...
Literary historians have long made an issue of the extent to which the modernist novel broke with co...
This study conceives the modernist novel as arising from a problem in genre. The end of the nineteen...
The paper focuses on the modernist psychological novel as a genre that dramatizes the radical trans...
“Behaviorism and Literary Modernity, 1913-2009”constructs a history of twentieth-century literature ...
The modernist novel displays a recurrent interest in the limits of perceptual and cognitive facultie...
This thesis argues that the popular characterization of high modernist fiction as esoteric, elitist,...
This paper presents an on-going PhD project that is part of the effort to reassess the alleged “inwa...
This dissertation argues that a growing failure to distinguish mind from machine induces a state of ...
Samuel Beckett is categorized as an absurdist dramatist. Martin Esslin in his book The Theatre of Ab...
This dissertation argues that a growing failure to distinguish mind from machine induces a state of ...
Braiding together strands of literary, phenomenological and art historical reflection, Modernism and...
Samuel Beckett is categorized as an absurdist dramatist. Martin Esslin in his book The Theatre of Ab...
This project examines the accomplishment of Samuel Beckett, particularly in his plays, in discoverin...
Can a novel exhibit signs of consciousness? If so, how does a writer express such characteristics? W...
Literary historians have long made an issue of the extent to which the modernist novel broke with co...
Literary historians have long made an issue of the extent to which the modernist novel broke with co...
This study conceives the modernist novel as arising from a problem in genre. The end of the nineteen...