The aim of the thesis is to provide a comprehensive view of the works of Samuel Beckett from the beginning to the novel Molloy. It is based on analysis of individual works and the subsequent attempt to uncover their interconnections. The thesis is divided into three parts: theory, poetry and prose. The first part deals mainly with the concept of incoherent reality which Beckett speaks about for the first time in his essay Proust and then returns to in other texts. In the novel Dream of Fair to Middling Women he makes it the basis of his own aesthetic. Behind the phenomena of the outer world lies chaos and nothingness and the artist's task is to integrate it into his work. The second part discusses the changes in the subject of the poems, hi...
This article deals with Samuel Beckett’s first essay “Dante… Bruno. Vico.. Joyce” which was publishe...
Avec le même vocabulaire, Samuel Beckett construit un même univers tant dans ses romans quedans ses ...
Can a novel exhibit signs of consciousness? If so, how does a writer express such characteristics? W...
Though Beckett is best known for Waiting for Godot, his first published work was not a play but a c...
Samuel Beckett\u27s first poem, \u27Whoroscope\u27, was written in 1930. The theme of this work was ...
This thesis sets out to explore the role of parody in Samuel Beckett's Molloy. According to the Merr...
Beckett has continually alluded to Dante throughout his career. This thesis traces the extent of the...
Samuel Beckett is categorized as an absurdist dramatist. Martin Esslin in his book The Theatre of Ab...
This thesis is a study of Beckett's later plays (those written in English as a first language) begin...
Originally published in French in 1951 and translated into English by the author himself four years ...
Samuel Beckett has long been known as a philosophical author, who drew on philosophical work to crea...
This paper examines the parallels between Samuel Beckett\u27s first five novels, Murphy, Watt, Mollo...
With the same vocabulary, Samuel Beckett builds the same universe in its novels or in her plays:Moll...
This thesis explores the questions of impotence and making in Samuel Beckett' s trilogy, Molloy, Mal...
The way that ideas are expressed in Samuel Beckett’s prose works is characteristic of a peculiar nar...
This article deals with Samuel Beckett’s first essay “Dante… Bruno. Vico.. Joyce” which was publishe...
Avec le même vocabulaire, Samuel Beckett construit un même univers tant dans ses romans quedans ses ...
Can a novel exhibit signs of consciousness? If so, how does a writer express such characteristics? W...
Though Beckett is best known for Waiting for Godot, his first published work was not a play but a c...
Samuel Beckett\u27s first poem, \u27Whoroscope\u27, was written in 1930. The theme of this work was ...
This thesis sets out to explore the role of parody in Samuel Beckett's Molloy. According to the Merr...
Beckett has continually alluded to Dante throughout his career. This thesis traces the extent of the...
Samuel Beckett is categorized as an absurdist dramatist. Martin Esslin in his book The Theatre of Ab...
This thesis is a study of Beckett's later plays (those written in English as a first language) begin...
Originally published in French in 1951 and translated into English by the author himself four years ...
Samuel Beckett has long been known as a philosophical author, who drew on philosophical work to crea...
This paper examines the parallels between Samuel Beckett\u27s first five novels, Murphy, Watt, Mollo...
With the same vocabulary, Samuel Beckett builds the same universe in its novels or in her plays:Moll...
This thesis explores the questions of impotence and making in Samuel Beckett' s trilogy, Molloy, Mal...
The way that ideas are expressed in Samuel Beckett’s prose works is characteristic of a peculiar nar...
This article deals with Samuel Beckett’s first essay “Dante… Bruno. Vico.. Joyce” which was publishe...
Avec le même vocabulaire, Samuel Beckett construit un même univers tant dans ses romans quedans ses ...
Can a novel exhibit signs of consciousness? If so, how does a writer express such characteristics? W...