Criticism > Drama Criticism > Beckett, Samuel - Jean-Jacques Mayoux (essay date October 1957)
Beckett, Samuel - Jean-Jacques Mayoux (essay date October 1957)
Jean-Jacques Mayoux (essay date October 1957)
SOURCE: Mayoux, Jean-Jacques. “The Theatre of Samuel Beckett.” Perspective 11, no. 3 (autumn 1959): 142-55.
[In the following essay, translated from the French version originally published in the October 1957 issue of Etudes Anglaises, Mayoux highlights Beckett's “laying open” the essence of human existence in Waiting for Godot, Endgame, All That Fall, and The Unnamable.]
I. AN OVERALL VIEW
I shall assume, in order to save time and space, that Samuel Beckett is well-known as a fifty-three year old Irishman who, in the last thirty years or so, has written admirably in two languages: poems, essays, fiction. His turning towards the theatre in about 1950 was probably due in part to expediency and perhaps to necessity, for the theatre, through visible but illusory forms, presents us with an unreal reality, a make-believe action. Those who have ceased to...
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Criticism: General Commentary
- Jean-Jacques Mayoux (essay date October 1957)
- Eva Metman (essay date January 1960)
- Jacques Guicharn and June Beckelman (essay date 1961)
- Ruby Cohn (essay date spring-summer 1962)
- Robert Wilcher (essay date summer 1976)
- Steven Connor (essay date 1990)
- Keir Elam (essay date 1994)
- Enoch Brater (essay date 1997)
- Andrew Kennedy (essay date 1997)
- Paul Lawley (essay date January 2000)
- William S. Haney II (essay date fall 2001)
- Criticism: En Attendant Godot (Waiting For Godot)
- Criticism: Fin De Partie (Endgame)
- Criticism: Spiel (Play)
- Criticism: That Time
- Criticism: EleuthéRia
- Further Reading
- Copyright
