The Pretty Quietist Pater: Samuel Beckett's Molloy and the Aesthetics of Quietism

Recent scholarship has highlighted the importance of 'quietism' in Samuel Beckett's personal and artistic development during the 1930s. This article extends this analysis by showing how the 'pretty quietist Pater' recited by Moran in Molloy (1951/55) was not Beckett's i...

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Опубликовано в: :Literature and theology
Главный автор: Wimbush, Andy (Автор)
Формат: Электронный ресурс Статья
Язык:Английский
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Опубликовано: Oxford University Press [2016]
В: Literature and theology
Индексация IxTheo:CB Христианская жизнь
CD Христианство и культура
KAH Новое время
KAJ Новейшее время
VA Философия
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Итог:Recent scholarship has highlighted the importance of 'quietism' in Samuel Beckett's personal and artistic development during the 1930s. This article extends this analysis by showing how the 'pretty quietist Pater' recited by Moran in Molloy (1951/55) was not Beckett's invention but rather borrowed from Jean de La Bruyère's satirical Dialogues sur le quiétisme (1699). The article also shows how Molloy, like Beckett's early novel Dream of Fair to Middling Women, explores quietism as an aesthetic framework that Beckett drew from André Gide's critical writing on Fyodor Dostoevsky.
ISSN:1477-4623
Второстепенные работы:Enthalten in: Literature and theology
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1093/litthe/frv025