Samuel Beckett and the Philosophical Image

Anthony Uhlmann (Associate Professor, University of Western Sydney)

Samuel Beckett and the Philosophical Image
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
24 September 2009
Pages
200
ISBN
9780521120128

Samuel Beckett and the Philosophical Image

Anthony Uhlmann (Associate Professor, University of Western Sydney)

Beckett often made use of images from the visual arts and readapted them, staging them in his plays, or using them in his fiction. Anthony Uhlmann sets out to explain how an image differs from other terms, like ‘metaphor’ or ‘representation’, and, in the process, to analyse Beckett’s use of images borrowed from philosophy and aesthetics. This study, first published in 2006, carefully examines Beckett’s thoughts on the image in his literary works and his extensive notes to the philosopher Arnold Geulincx. Uhlmann considers how images might allow one kind of interaction between philosophy and literature, and how Beckett makes use of images which are borrowed from, or drawn into dialogue with, philosophical images from Geulincx, Berkeley, Bergson, and the ancient Stoics. Uhlmann’s reading of Beckett’s aesthetic and philosophical interests provides a revolutionary reading of the importance of the image in his work.

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