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Samuel Beckett's Tattered Syntaxes
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Beckett’s conflicted Irish identity centered around the figures of mother, Mother Ireland and “mother Anglo-Irish”. Refusing Yeats’s Anglo-Irish legacy, he chose the first major Irish-Catholic writ...
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19 November 2026
Beckett’s conflicted Irish identity centered around the figures of mother, Mother Ireland and “mother Anglo-Irish”. Refusing Yeats’s Anglo-Irish legacy, he chose the first major Irish-Catholic writer as a model instead. From Joyce came the “itch to write”, but one inhibited by Beckett's fear that he had “nothing to say”. The vision of a series of “brotherly likes” generating only the same seemed to condemn his project, shared with Joyce, of developing a language that was no one’s mother tongue to repeating Finnegans Wake’s exploitation of the lexicon’s productive categories. Ultimately rejecting Joyce’s solution, he instead extracted tattered syntaxes from the closed-class grammatical categories, creating a new Dante-inspired literary language whose matter acknowledged change, recognizing some things did not return, had no likes, were less.
Price: $141.00
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Faux Titre
Publication Date:
19 November 2026
ISBN: 9789004771529
Format: Hardcover
Ann Banfield, Professor Emerita, English Department, University of California, Berkeley. She is author of Unspeakable Sentences: Narration and Representation in the Language of Fiction (1982), The Phantom Table: Woolf, Fry, Russell and the Epistemology of Modernism (2000) and Describing the Unobserved and Other Essays, Sylvie Patron, ed. (2019).