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Samuel Beckett and the Postcolonial Novel

Patrick Bixby author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:5th Nov '09

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Samuel Beckett and the Postcolonial Novel cover

An analysis of the way Beckett reflects Irish politics after independence in his fiction.

Beckett has long been seen as a distinctly 'apolitical' and 'ahistorical' writer, but this reputation fails to do him justice. Placing Beckett's novels in the context of the Irish Free State, Patrick Bixby explores for the first time their confrontation with the legacies of both Irish nationalism and British imperialism.Samuel Beckett has long been seen as a distinctly 'apolitical' and 'ahistorical' writer, but this reputation fails to do him justice. Placing Beckett's novels in the context of the newly-liberated Irish Free State, Patrick Bixby explores for the first time their confrontation with the legacies of both Irish nationalism and British imperialism. In doing so, he reveals Beckett's fiction as a remarkable example of how postcolonial writing addresses the relationships between private consciousness and public life, as well as those between the novel form and a cultural environment including not only the literary tradition, but also political speeches, national monuments, and anthropological studies. With special attention to these relationships, the study demonstrates Beckett's challenge to familiar narratives of personal identity and communal belonging, which makes his writing integral to understanding the history of the novel and the fate of modernism, in addition to the emergence of postcolonial literature.

'Bixby's invaluable contribution not only opens Beckett's work to a new understanding but offers new possibilities for thinking about postcolonial fiction beyond the Irish context and beyond the dour presumptions of Frederick Jameson's famous argument that third-world fiction will always generally lag behind its Western counterparts. Bixby proves, conclusively it seems to me, that a writer can be both relentlessly innovative and profoundly engaged with postcolonial conditions.' David Lloyd, Modern Philology

ISBN: 9780521113885

Dimensions: 235mm x 160mm x 7mm

Weight: 530g

246 pages