Examines the intersection of Samuel Beckett's thirty-second playlet Breath with the visual artsSamuel Beckett, one of the most prominent playwrights of the twentieth century, wrote a thirty-second playlet for the stage that does not include actors, text, characters or drama but only stage directions. Breath (1969) is the focus and the only theatrical text examined in this study, which demonstrates how the piece became emblematic of the interdisciplinary exchanges that occur in Beckett's later writings, and of the cross-fertilisation of the theatre with the visual arts. The book attends to fifty breath-related artworks (including sculpture, painting, new media, sound art, performance art) and contextualises Beckett's Breath within the intermedial and high-modernist discourse thereby contributing to the expanding field of intermedial Beckett criticism. Key FeaturesExamines Beckett's ultimate venture to define the borders between a theatrical performance and purely visual representationJuxtaposes Beckett's Breath with breath-related artworks by prominent visual artists who investigate the far-reaching potential of the representation of respiration by challenging modernist essentialismThe focus on this primary human physiological function and its relation to arts and culture is highly pertinent to studies of human performance, the nature of embodiment and its relation to cultural expressionFacilitates new intermedial discourses around the nature and aesthetic possibilities of breath, the minimum condition of existence, at the interface between the visual arts and performance practices and their relation to questions of spectacle, objecthood and materiality
Breath and Other Shorts
Un-bodiedVoices,. theThingItself. and. Beckett's. NeuralTheatre. S. E.Gontarski Abstract Gilles Deleuze reminds us in his essay on Beckett's teleplays, 'The Exhausted', that the image is central to Beckett's art, neither representation ...
Breath and Other Shorts
... 'Sons of disorder: Thomas Carlyle, S B, and the travesty — 'What we are given to mean: Endgame Shrubsall, Anthony. ... Arnold Slattery, E. M. 'The theatre of the absurd Smith, Frederik N. 'B and Berkeley: a reconsideration V35B V13A ...
... Breath . Breath Called by Beckett " a farce in five acts , " the thirty - five second sketch is its author's most extremely reduced view of human destiny . On a stage " littered with miscellaneous rubbish , " a faint cry is heard , and ...
The Sex Appeal of the Inorganic. Translated by Massimo Verdicchio. New York and London: Continuum, 2004. Philip, M. NourbeSe. “The Ga(s)p.” In Poetics and Precarity, edited by Myung Mi Kim and Cristanne Miller. Albany: SUNY, 2016, pp.
... Beckett doesn't trifle ; you are expected to take him seriously . However many in the large audience could not refrain from laughter as the 35 seconds ended . " 3 And : " Breath'- a short signal from Beckett that he still exists ? —is a ...
Paul Kalanithi died in March 2015, while working on this book, yet his words live on as a guide and a gift to us all. “I began to realize that coming face to face with my own mortality, in a sense, had changed nothing and everything,” ...
This open access book studies breath and breathing in literature and culture and provides crucial insights into the history of medicine, health and the emotions, the foundations of beliefs concerning body, spirit and world, the connections ...
... A Critique of Psychoanalytic Reason: Hypnosis as a Scientific Problem from Lavoisier to Lacan, trans. Martha Noel Evans (Stanford: Stanford 8 9 10 11 12 University Press, 1992), passim. See Samuel Beckett, Proust (New York: Grove Press ...