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This book reads Martin Crimp's The Treatment (1993), Attempts on
her Life (1997), The Country (2000), Face to the Wall (2002), Cruel
and Tender (2004) and his adaptation of Chekhov's The Seagull
(2006) in the context of contemporary, late capitalist societies of
control or of 'spectacle', and explores how female collapse in
particular works as a form of denunciation of the violence of
globalized, technological neo-liberalism. The book contends that
Crimp is a post-Holocaust writer, whose dramaturgy is pervaded by
the ethical and aesthetic debates that the Holocaust has generated
in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Its main claim is
that, by interpellating spectators through the defamiliarized
language of collapse and testimony, Crimp invites spectators to
contribute to detecting the seeds of 'barbarism' as they may detect
them in their context, thus warning them about the introduction of
violence in supposedly civilized relationships and thereby also
contributing to overcoming the contemporary ethical impasse. The
book finally argues that female characters who pass on their
testimony are shown to the audience in the 'process of becoming'
ethical bodies - namely, they are emerge as ethical out of the
perceived necessity to integrate both the Other as essential parts
of their beings, thus recovering an innate, Baumian sense of
responsibility towards the Other.
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