Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Beckett, Samuel - Mary Catanzaro (essay date 1995)
Beckett, Samuel - Mary Catanzaro (essay date 1995)
Mary Catanzaro (essay date 1995)
SOURCE: Catanzaro, Mary. “Disconnected Voices, Displaced Bodies: The Dismembered Couple in Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape, Happy Days, and Play.” In Literature and the Grotesque, edited by Michael J. Meyer, pp. 31-51. Atlanta: Rodopi, 1995.
[In the following essay, Catanzaro argues that the dismembered bodies of couples in Beckett's works are metaphors for the failure of communication in relationships.]
Beckett's plays of the late 1950's and the 1960's can be read as grotesque commentaries on unsatisfying personal relationships caused by failure in communication. Krapp's Last Tape,1 Happy Days,2 and Play3 address the full range of separateness and otherness which undermine accord in intimate relationships. Within the scaffolding of failure in speech, the physical impediments and emotional ruptures reveal the subjects as subverted,...
[The entire page is 9233 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- Michèle Praeger (essay date spring 1992)
- Rupert Wood (essay date 1994)
- Graham Fraser (essay date fall-winter 1995)
- Mary Catanzaro (essay date 1995)
- David D. Green (essay date autumn-winter 1995-96)
- Steven Miskinis (essay date winter 1996)
- Julian A. Garforth (essay date autumn 1996)
- Xerxes Mehta (essay date autumn 1996)
- K. Jeevan Kumar (essay date winter 1997)
- Jeanette R. Malkin (essay date spring 1997)
- Marguerite Tassi (essay date summer 1997)
- Jacqueline Thomas (essay date winter 1998)
- S. E. Gontarski (essay date fall 1999)
- Daniel Katz (essay date 1999)
- William Cloonan (essay date winter 2001)
- Daniel Katz (essay date summer 2003)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
