Samuel Beckett and ecology

Trish McTighe (Editor), Céline Thobois-Gupta * (Editor), Nicholas E. Johnson (Editor)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Book/ReportEdited bookpeer-review

Abstract

This is the first full-length book to investigate Samuel Beckett's work through contemporary ecological thinking, offering a wide range of artistic and scholarly responses to the ecological crises provoked, mediated or challenged by Beckett's work.

Beckett was not an environmental artist, but his oeuvre, poised between forms of precarity and hope, is a rich territory for the exploration of the most pressing issues of our time: the rift between the human species, its technological and economic advancement and the ecologies that sustain it all.

In recent years, Beckett's name, aphorisms and work have been invoked relative to environmental catastrophe, helping stimulate debates on ecology, the arts and the ecosystemic place of the human. The volume reflects on ecology as a productive term, as well as the varied practices and narratives in Beckettian intermedial ecologies. While some authors offer new insights into the connections between Beckett and the Anthropocene across translation, adaptation, performance and the visual arts, others also explore the potential of Happy Days (1961) for ecological thought and the role it has taken in recent ecodramaturgical experiments in the theatre. Woven throughout the volume are short bursts of writing, 'coups de gong', which testify to the variety of Beckett-inspired local responses to global climate instability.

Original languageEnglish
PublisherMethuen Drama (Bloomsbury)
Number of pages288
ISBN (Electronic)9781350366046, 9781350366053
ISBN (Print)9781350366022
Publication statusEarly online date - 23 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • anthropocene
  • collaborative ecologies
  • eco-dramaturgy
  • translation ecology

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Arts and Humanities(all)

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