Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 An endgame of aesthetics
- 2 Beckett's English fiction
- 3 Three novels and four nouvelles
- 4 Waiting for Godot and Endgame
- 5 Stages of identity
- 6 Beginning again
- 7 The mediated Quixote
- 8 Dead heads
- 9 Disabled figures
- 10 Beckett's poems and verse translations or
- 11 Beckett as director
- 12 Beckett's bilingualism
- 13 Beckett and the philosophers
- Further reading
- Index
7 - The mediated Quixote
the radio and television plays, and Film
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 An endgame of aesthetics
- 2 Beckett's English fiction
- 3 Three novels and four nouvelles
- 4 Waiting for Godot and Endgame
- 5 Stages of identity
- 6 Beginning again
- 7 The mediated Quixote
- 8 Dead heads
- 9 Disabled figures
- 10 Beckett's poems and verse translations or
- 11 Beckett as director
- 12 Beckett's bilingualism
- 13 Beckett and the philosophers
- Further reading
- Index
Summary
No epoch-making artist simply accepts his or her means of art-making as handed down from previous artists. From Aristophanes to Michelangelo to Shakespeare to Moliere to Picasso to Beckett, all can be seen (sometimes only in retrospect) to have engaged in lifelong critiques of their working media. This is never in itself a reliable indicator of greatness, and in twentieth-century art - which, high and low, good and bad, has been preoccupied with reflexivity - it is an especially poor one. Sometimes, however, an artist's critique is so confident, thoroughgoing and persuasive that it causes significant change in the public's idea of what a particular medium is, or can be. As critics have frequently pointed out, Beckett's stage plays actually changed many people's notions of what can happen, or is supposed to happen, when they enter a theatre.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Beckett , pp. 124 - 144Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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