Criticism > Drama Criticism > Beckett, Samuel - William S. Haney II (essay date fall 2001)
Beckett, Samuel - William S. Haney II (essay date fall 2001)
William S. Haney II (essay date fall 2001)
SOURCE: Haney, William S, II. “Beckett Out of His Mind: The Theatre of the Absurd.” Studies in the Literary Imagination 34, no. 2 (fall 2001): 39-55.
[In the following essay, Haney uses Eastern philosophies to explain the levels of consciousness in Beckett's Waiting for Godot and Endgame.]
INTRODUCTION
Playwrights such as Samuel Beckett, Eugene Ionesco, and Harold Pinter write in a context in which traditional narratives, or what Lyotard calls grand or metanarrative (31-35), no longer inspire confidence, leaving society with a sense of alienation and loss. These dramatists were impelled by their historical and cultural contexts to explore the mind's reality through a medium that involved the physical embodiment of characters on stage, in spite of the absence of decisive meaning. As Martin Esslin has pointed out, going from the medium of language and a reliance on meaning or...
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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
