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SBT/A 19 features selected papers from the Borderless Beckett /
Beckett sans frontieres Symposium held in Tokyo at Waseda
University in 2006. The essays penned by eminent and young scholars
from around the world examine the many ways Beckett's art crosses
borders: coupling reality and dream, life and death, as in Japanese
Noh drama, or transgressing distinctions between limits and
limitlessness; humans, animals, virtual bodies, and stones; French
and English; words and silence; and the received frameworks of
philosophy and aesthetics. The highlight of the volume is the
contribution by Nobel Laureate J. M. Coetzee, the special guest of
the Symposium. His article entitled "Eight Ways of Looking at
Samuel Beckett" introduces a variety of novel approaches to
Beckett, ranging from a comparative analysis of his work and
Melville's Moby Dick to a biographical observation concerning
Beckett's application for a lectureship at a South African
university. Other highlights include innovative essays by the
plenary speakers and panelists - Enoch Brater, Mary Bryden, Bruno
Clement, Steven Connor, S. E. Gontarski, Evelyne Grossman, and
Angela Moorjani - and an illuminating section on Beckett's
television dramas. The Borderless Beckett volume renews our
awareness of the admirable quality and wide range of approaches
that characterize Beckett studies.
Ireland on Stage: Beckett and After, a collection of ten essays on
contemporary Irish theatre, focuses primarily on Irish playwrights
and their works, both in text and on the stage, in the latter half
of the twentieth century. It is symbolic that most of the editorial
work for this book was carried out in 2006, the centenary year of
the birth of Samuel Beckett. While the editors consider Beckett to
be the most important playwright in post-1950 Irish theatre, it
should be noted that the contributors to the book are not bound in
any sense by Beckettian criticism of any kind. The contributors
draw freely on Beckett and his work: some examine Beckett's plays
in detail, while others, for whom Beckett remains an indispensable
springboard to their discussions, pay closer attention to his or
their own contemporaries, ranging from Brian Friel and Frank
McGuinness to Marina Carr and Conor McPherson. The editorial policy
of the book was flexible enough to allow contributors to go as far
back as a hundred years in their attempt to contextualise post-1950
Irish theatre. The works of Oscar Wilde, W.B. Yeats, J.M. Synge,
Bernard Shaw, Sean O'Casey, and James Joyce are frequently
mentioned throughout the book; this undoubtedly added to the
dynamics of the book, as well as to the rigour which the editors
believe should be apparent in the collection as a whole
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