In this paper I show how Žižek’s theories can serve as a useful tool in interpreting Samuel Beckett’s works, and in particular his novels. I focus on his novel The Unnamable and on the way its main character is constructed. This has been typically understood as representing a fragmented or decentered self, and thus as a form of critique of the Cartesian subject, ‘the spectre that is haunting Western academia.’ By contrast, I attempt to demonstrate how this character is rather simply reduced to its minimal condition of possibility. As such, it is the expression of a radical experience of the subject, which shares a deep affinity with Žižek’s theory as presented in The Ticklish Subject. The comprehension of the subject that is revealed through the structure of the character implies a certain comprehension of the humanity of the human subject. Through an allegorical reading of Beckett’s short text All Strange Away, I show how his characters function as a radical critique of the conception of the human as a ‘gifted animal,’ proposing instead a vision of the human subject as original lack. In this sense Beckett’s novels can be said to be an effective weapon of potential ideological resistance.

Bellini, F., Beckett’s Ticklish Characters: reading Beckett through Žižek, <<INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ŽIŽEK STUDIES>>, 2009; 3 (3): N/A-N/A [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/32464]

Beckett’s Ticklish Characters: reading Beckett through Žižek

Bellini, Federico
2009

Abstract

In this paper I show how Žižek’s theories can serve as a useful tool in interpreting Samuel Beckett’s works, and in particular his novels. I focus on his novel The Unnamable and on the way its main character is constructed. This has been typically understood as representing a fragmented or decentered self, and thus as a form of critique of the Cartesian subject, ‘the spectre that is haunting Western academia.’ By contrast, I attempt to demonstrate how this character is rather simply reduced to its minimal condition of possibility. As such, it is the expression of a radical experience of the subject, which shares a deep affinity with Žižek’s theory as presented in The Ticklish Subject. The comprehension of the subject that is revealed through the structure of the character implies a certain comprehension of the humanity of the human subject. Through an allegorical reading of Beckett’s short text All Strange Away, I show how his characters function as a radical critique of the conception of the human as a ‘gifted animal,’ proposing instead a vision of the human subject as original lack. In this sense Beckett’s novels can be said to be an effective weapon of potential ideological resistance.
2009
Inglese
Bellini, F., Beckett’s Ticklish Characters: reading Beckett through Žižek, <<INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ŽIŽEK STUDIES>>, 2009; 3 (3): N/A-N/A [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/32464]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/32464
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