About mouths and resonances: The affirmation of an enunciating consciousness

  • Carolina Brnci´c
Keywords: Beckett, drama, monologue, character, dramatic speech

Abstract

In the following article we will explore the status and function of monologism in three dramatic pieces by Samuel Beckett, Happy Days (1961), Play (1962-1963), Not I (1972). We will approach them in his relationship with the notion of dramatic character, its “space-temporal-discursive conditioning” and its relationship with “another”. Within the three plays, seen as a projection, it is possible to visualise a progressive radicalisation on the manner of placing a character, denaturalise and singularise it. These three different placements address the same communicative situation and the same problem: they are all the affirmation of an enunciative self-consciousness.

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Published
2016-07-15
How to Cite
Brnci´cC. (2016). About mouths and resonances: The affirmation of an enunciating consciousness. Beckettiana, (15), 37-50. Retrieved from http://revistascientificas.filo.uba.ar/index.php/Beckettiana/article/view/7585
Section
Artículos