Echo’s Bones and Samuel Beckett’s Early Aesthetics: “The Vulture”, “Alba” and “Dortmunder” as Poetic Manifestos

The present article is devoted to the exposition of Samuel Beckett’s aesthetics as formulated and exemplified in the key poems from Echo’s Bones: “The Vulture”, “Alba”, and “Dortmunder”. These texts emerge as poetic manifestos, in which Beckett explores the sources and materials of poetry, and addre...

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Main Author: Sławomir Studniarz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses 2020-03-01
Series:Estudios Irlandeses
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/DEF-STUDNIARZ.pdf
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spelling doaj-87ca91cd7a9e46aab0f358dbaa35a5922020-11-25T02:56:35ZengAsociación Española de Estudios IrlandesesEstudios Irlandeses1699-311X1699-311X2020-03-0115151161299357Echo’s Bones and Samuel Beckett’s Early Aesthetics: “The Vulture”, “Alba” and “Dortmunder” as Poetic ManifestosSławomir Studniarz0 University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, Poland The present article is devoted to the exposition of Samuel Beckett’s aesthetics as formulated and exemplified in the key poems from Echo’s Bones: “The Vulture”, “Alba”, and “Dortmunder”. These texts emerge as poetic manifestos, in which Beckett explores the sources and materials of poetry, and addresses broader philosophical questions about poetry and art in general. Among his chief aesthetic concerns are the office of poetry vis-à-vis the human condition, as well as the efficacy of verbal magic, intimately connected with the possibility of artistic transcendence, or in other words, with the redemptive power of verbal art. These poems provide ample evidence that Beckett was already grappling with the notion of the (f)utility of art in a world filled with inevitable suffering and trying to formulate a poetic response to the pain and struggle of existence, while entertaining the possibility of redemption or transcendence through artistic creation and aesthetic contemplation. Especially “Alba” and “Dortmunder” seem to suggest that poetry or art momentarily eclipses the phenomenal world and offers a surrogate salvation, and an aesthetic experience emerges as a palliative to the anguish and turmoil of existence, two notions to which Beckett had remained faithful throughout his long literary career.https://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/DEF-STUDNIARZ.pdfaestheticspoeticsartistic transcendencesound texturemusicalityself-reflexive concerns.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sławomir Studniarz
spellingShingle Sławomir Studniarz
Echo’s Bones and Samuel Beckett’s Early Aesthetics: “The Vulture”, “Alba” and “Dortmunder” as Poetic Manifestos
Estudios Irlandeses
aesthetics
poetics
artistic transcendence
sound texture
musicality
self-reflexive concerns.
author_facet Sławomir Studniarz
author_sort Sławomir Studniarz
title Echo’s Bones and Samuel Beckett’s Early Aesthetics: “The Vulture”, “Alba” and “Dortmunder” as Poetic Manifestos
title_short Echo’s Bones and Samuel Beckett’s Early Aesthetics: “The Vulture”, “Alba” and “Dortmunder” as Poetic Manifestos
title_full Echo’s Bones and Samuel Beckett’s Early Aesthetics: “The Vulture”, “Alba” and “Dortmunder” as Poetic Manifestos
title_fullStr Echo’s Bones and Samuel Beckett’s Early Aesthetics: “The Vulture”, “Alba” and “Dortmunder” as Poetic Manifestos
title_full_unstemmed Echo’s Bones and Samuel Beckett’s Early Aesthetics: “The Vulture”, “Alba” and “Dortmunder” as Poetic Manifestos
title_sort echo’s bones and samuel beckett’s early aesthetics: “the vulture”, “alba” and “dortmunder” as poetic manifestos
publisher Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses
series Estudios Irlandeses
issn 1699-311X
1699-311X
publishDate 2020-03-01
description The present article is devoted to the exposition of Samuel Beckett’s aesthetics as formulated and exemplified in the key poems from Echo’s Bones: “The Vulture”, “Alba”, and “Dortmunder”. These texts emerge as poetic manifestos, in which Beckett explores the sources and materials of poetry, and addresses broader philosophical questions about poetry and art in general. Among his chief aesthetic concerns are the office of poetry vis-à-vis the human condition, as well as the efficacy of verbal magic, intimately connected with the possibility of artistic transcendence, or in other words, with the redemptive power of verbal art. These poems provide ample evidence that Beckett was already grappling with the notion of the (f)utility of art in a world filled with inevitable suffering and trying to formulate a poetic response to the pain and struggle of existence, while entertaining the possibility of redemption or transcendence through artistic creation and aesthetic contemplation. Especially “Alba” and “Dortmunder” seem to suggest that poetry or art momentarily eclipses the phenomenal world and offers a surrogate salvation, and an aesthetic experience emerges as a palliative to the anguish and turmoil of existence, two notions to which Beckett had remained faithful throughout his long literary career.
topic aesthetics
poetics
artistic transcendence
sound texture
musicality
self-reflexive concerns.
url https://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/DEF-STUDNIARZ.pdf
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