The passage provides an overview of a book about Samuel Beckett's literary influences and legacy on later writers.
The book discusses Samuel Beckett's influences from other writers and the impact and legacy his works had on subsequent generations of authors.
It describes John Montague's visit to Samuel Beckett shortly before his death, where Beckett copied out some final lines from a previous poem that reflected on his impending demise.
Becketts Literary Legacies
Becketts Literary Legacies
Edited by
Matthew Feldman and Mark Nixon
CAMBRIDGE SCHOLARS PUBLISHING
Becketts Literary Legacies, edited by Matthew Feldman and Mark Nixon
This book first published 2007 by
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
15 Angerton Gardens, Newcastle, NE5 2JA, UK
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Copyright 2007 by Matthew Feldman and Mark Nixon and contributors
All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN 1-84718-281-X; ISBN 13: 9781847182814
For Kevin Feldman, one of a pseudo-couple, but always first amongst equals
And for Sheila and Peter Nixon, with gratitude for their love and support
The scroll will not stay put. Baffled, Beckett wrestles with the vellum, whilst I set up the small black ink bottle, with the skinny nib to dip in it. Finally, I have to hold down the curling corners, as he strives to write what may be his last lines: he died four years ago last December, 13 days after my visit. He would have been 88 on April 13. The lines are not new: he has chosen a quatrain written after his fathers death, and the implications for his own demise, so long attended, are all too clear. Redeem the surrogate goodbyes the sheet astream in your hand who have no more for the land and the glass unmisted above your eyes. The sheet is not astream, but bucking and bounding, and his hands are shaking. Twice he has to stroke out lines, but he still goes on, with that near ferocity I associate with him, until the four lines are copied, in the center of a page. He looks at me, I look down to check, and murmur appropriate approval. He rolls the vellum, and with due ceremony hands it over to me, with the carton. Then, with a gesture of finality, he sweeps the lot, ink bottle, long black pen and spare pages of vellum, into the wastepaper bin.
John Montague, 17 April 1994
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments ...................................................................................... ix
Chapter One................................................................................................ 1 After The End of Samuel Beckett: Influences, Legacies, and Legacees Matthew Feldman
Chapter Three........................................................................................... 40 Absence as Influence: Samuel Beckett and Paul Muldoon Jonathan Ellis
Chapter Four............................................................................................. 58 Like an idiot at High Mass: Beckettian Motifs in John Banvilles Art Trilogy Justin Beplate
Chapter Five ............................................................................................. 78 Transforming the Pseudo-Couple: Beckett in Kenzaburo Oes Good-Bye, My Book! Yoshiki Tajiri
Chapter Six............................................................................................... 95 Rhythms of Doubt: J. M. Coetzee and Samuel Beckett Steven Matthews
Chapter Seven......................................................................................... 112 Beckett Joyce Mayrcker und kein Ende Dirk Van Hulle
Table of Contents
viii Chapter Eight.......................................................................................... 129 69 Ways To Play Sam Again: Beckettiana in Jrg Laederachs Works and Letters Friedhelm Rathjen
Chapter Nine........................................................................................... 152 Text-void: Silent Words in Paul Celan and Samuel Beckett Mark Nixon
Chapter Ten............................................................................................ 169 Beckett, Sarah Kane and the Theatre of Catastrophe Elizabeth Barry
Chapter Eleven ....................................................................................... 188 The Book of Allusions: Where is Samuel Beckett in Paul Austers The New York Trilogy? Catherine Morley
Chapter Twelve ...................................................................................... 207 Stirring from the field of the possible: Beckett, DeLillo, and the Possibility of Fiction Peter Boxall
Contributors ........................................................................................... 227 Index ....................................................................................................... 230
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
For their support in bringing Becketts Literary Legacies to completion, the editors gratefully acknowledge the support of all contributors to this volume, as well as the Beckett International Foundation at the University of Reading and librarians at the Bodleian Library Upper Reserve. We would also like to thank Andy Nercessian, Carol Koulikourdi, Amanda Millar and the helpful staff at Cambridge Scholars Publishing generally. We also would like to express our thanks to Tom Crook, Steph Prince, and Janet Wilson for their assistance in preparing the final manuscript.
CHAPTER ONE AFTER THE END OF SAMUEL BECKETT: INFLUENCES, LEGACIES, AND LEGACEES MATTHEW FELDMAN
In his powerful memoir comprising the epigraph to this volume, John Montague may well elicit the ultimate legacy from Samuel Beckett (1906- 1989). By December 1989 Becketts end was near, and both men knew it. The Nobel Laureate, dying in a Parisian old crocks home, copied the above quatrain, actually written much earlier, for a canonical anthology of Irish literary greats, The Great Book of Ireland. 1 The poem Beckett chose to include in Montagues edition, Da Tagte Es, had itself been originally composed, like its Dantesque partner, Malacoda, in the long months following William Becketts funeral in mid-1933; it is a sons poignant eulogy to his departed father. But more than this, in Montagues 1994 testimony, Da Tagte Es ultimately comes to act, in a way, as a literary tombstone commemorating both Becketts. Nothwithstanding the context offered by Montagues narrative of his last encounter with Beckett, a deathly theme is already inscribed in the two poems originally published in Becketts 1935 collection of poetry, Echos Bones and Other Precipitates. In the first place, both Da Tagte Es and Malacoda are thematically anchored to that floating signifier of mortality, the death-ship, which, no more for the land in Da Tagte Es, issues its last call in the final lines of Malacoda:
all aboard all souls half-mast aye aye
nay
Moreover, the subject matter of these poemsMalacoda begins thrice he came, referring to the impassable undertakers measuring, boxing and burying of Becketts fatherconcerns the paradoxical recognition and Chapter One
2 rejection of the limits imposed by death. 2 I will argue this liminality marks Becketts writing as surely as it marks his final days in Les Tiers Temps. Like the century in which he lived, death is omnipresent in Becketts work; as if writing about, or indeed beyond, death gave him the striking vitality noted in Montagues account. An ambivalence toward life itself, and the imminent solution to that ambivalence, is beautifully conveyed here with resignation and, perhaps, disappointment just days before Becketts death; an event dramatically foreshadowed by his binning of pen and paper, that lifeblood of the writer, after finishing the transcription of Da Tagte Es. But such a gesture of finality aside, the pre-boarding of his own death-ship also merited a prolonged, sardonic farewell, as Montague recounts: And again the eyes focus on me, and I am astounded as always by their size and color, large as blue marbles. But clouded now, not watchful or challenging. Im done, again, with the same vehemence. But it takes such a long time. This episode seems particularly instructive in approaching Samuel Becketts literary legacies; and more narrowly, as I will presently discuss with reference to the ensuing eleven chapters, it is also helpful in framing Becketts Literary Legacies. In A Few Drinks and a Hymn, both the legacy (Beckett) and the legacee (Montague) are present, establishing a dialogic connection so frequently absent in literary debts and influences. Perhaps of even greater importance, in offering a self-chosen legacy to the country of his birth at the end of his life, Beckett drew upon a legacy erected more than fifty years earlier over the death of his father. This is effected through the bucking transcription of Becketts poem for The Great Book of Ireland, but also by making a kind of Doppelgnger (rather than a pseudo-couple 3 ) of his father: I sat beside my father when he was dying. Fight, fight, fight, he kept saying. But I have no fight left. 4 In these layers of personal-cum-artistic meaning, the richness of which is enhanced by the falsifiable ability to empirically reconstruct pivotal events in both 1933 and 1989, Da Tagte Es thus stands as a memorial to memory, to mortality, and to the poetics of mourning. All of these tropes bear heavily upon Becketts writing, and upon his now astronomical literary legacy, as the essays here attest. Through wide- ranging example, contributors to this volume have undertaken analyses of Becketts influence on major international writers, most of whom are still alive and at work forging their own literary legacies. As for Becketts, the authors surveyed here find that legacy to be both philosophically rich and artistically challenging. And Beckett scholars of similarly global breadth consider Becketts art to be a truly revolutionary one, pushing at the very boundaries of literature. What follows is the first sustained attempt to Becketts Literary Legacies 3 gauge the literary reception of that project, famously announced in Becketts 1949 Three Dialogues with Georges Duthuit: There are many ways in which the thing I am trying in vain to say may be tried in vain to be said [.] of this submission, this admission, this fidelity to failure, a new occasion, a new term of relation, and of the act which, unable to act, obliged to act, he makes, and expressive act, even if only of itself, of its impossibility, of its obligation (Disjecta, 144-45). In introducing the essays to follow, I want to suggest that through oftentimes paradoxical (especially postwar) writing, a language of silence, or a text-void to use Paul Celans neologism, is in fact a recurring, and in some cases, decisive artistic legacy for authors devising in Becketts wake. For it is precisely this literary minimalism (Friedhelm Rathjen); abstract minimalism (Catherine Morley); poetics of impasse (Peter Boxall); formal disunities (Steven Matthews); or work in regress (Dirk Van Hulle)that conscious attempt to find a form for abstract literature undertaken after the completion of Watt in 1945seized upon in the following essays. Indeed, for the majority of the critics and their respective case studies here, Becketts influence represents an apparent schism in the Western literary canon, one perceived to be an artistic challenge no less than a literary liberation from representationhowever well-disguised the latter may be. 5
This now-famous shift toward the embrace of artistic and epistemological failure is dramatised in Krapps Last Tape as The vision at last [.] the dark I have always struggled to keep under is in reality my most (The Complete Dramatic Works, 220); although Beckett exhorted his authorised biographer to note that Krapps vision was on the pier at Dn Laoghaire; mine was in my mothers room. Make that clear once and for all. In doing so, Knowlson reminds us that even literary radicals come from somewhere: The image of Beckett undergoing a conversion like St Paul on the road to Damascus can too easily distort our view of his development as a writer [.] The ground had been well prepared. Turning toward this ground, that is to say, gesturing toward the European canon in which Beckett may still be situated, is thus of help in contextualising even THE revelation. 6 As regards the latter, in conversation with another legacee, the American writer Lawrence Shainberg, Beckett was explicit on the connection between that radical art and the revelatory effect of watching his mother dying from Parkinsons Disease:
Her face was a mask, completely unrecognizable. Looking at her, I had a sudden realization that all the work Id done before was on the wrong track. I guess youd have to call it a revelation. Strong word, I know, but Chapter One
4 so it was. I simply understood that there was no sense adding to the store of information, gathering knowledge. The whole attempt at knowledge, it seemed to me, had come to nothing. It was all haywire. What I had to do was investigate not-knowing, not-perceiving, the whole world of incompleteness. (Shainberg, 106)
Importantly, Beckett repeatedly contrasted this not-knowing with the exhaustive knowledgeor at least expansivenessof his own artistic mentor, James Joyce:
The more Joyce knew the more he could. Hes tending toward omniscience and omnipotence as an artist. Im working with impotence, ignorance [.] My little exploration is that whole zone of being that has always been set aside by artists as something unusableas something by definition incompatible with art. 7
As several ensuing essays note, the mature writings of Joyce and Beckett are in some respects diametrically opposed, with writers foundering in their wakes being forced to choose between a master minimalist and a master maximalist. But even if this divergent Irish bequest is an apt characterisation of the two, citing a few of Becketts own influences will suggest that even a non-can-er, a non-know-er may be set within that much-maligned hydra, the European artistic canon. At the very least, such a sketch gives the lie to his contemporaneous remarks on Jack B. Yeats: The artist who stakes his being is from nowhere, has no kith (Disjecta, 149). That is to say, like those literary artists surveyed here, Beckett was himself demonstrably influenced by a host of canonical writers; contra his Homage to Jack B. Yeats, he too had artistic kith (like Jack B. Yeats, or Bram van Velde), and he too came from somewhere. In considering this intertextual aspect of Becketts writings, a vital one admirably traced in numerous works of recent scholarship, 8 Becketts poem for The Great Book of Ireland again emerges as a fitting example. Although no explicit reference is made within the poem itself (unlike the reference to Dantes Scarmilion in Becketts companion piece Malacoda, both recondite names taken from the windy demons of Infernos Canto XXI); the title of Da Tagte Es [Then Dawn Broke] is itself allusive. As Mark Nixon has shown, this seemingly opaque text is partially indebted to the medieval German troubadour, Walther von Vogelweide. For it is this Minnesngers poem Nemt, frowe disen kranz [Take this wreath, my lady; sometimes given as Der Traum; The Dream], containing the phrase it was dawn and I had to wake, that Beckett uses as a point of departure in writing about his fathers death. 9
Becketts Literary Legacies 5 Or does he? For, as is so frequently the case in Becketts interwar writings, Nixon has shown that the allusion is poached from a secondary source, in this case John G. Robertsons 1902 A History of German Literature, which argues that Walther speaks to the modern world almost as a contemporary (Robertson, 127). 10 But what Beckett heard, to be sure, were cries of mourning. As both Nixon and Giuseppina Restivo argue, Walther is the forerunner of the poetics of pathos; one of the most famous icons of melancholy (Restivo, 103). This is borne out by Becketts use of Walther as early as Da Tagte Es, and as late as his 1988 Stirrings Still: for want of a stone to sit like Walther [] not knowing where he was or how he got there or how to get back to whence he knew not how he came (The Complete Short Prose, 263). Here, Becketts artistic trope of impotence dovetails with the melancholy such a failure invariably brings. This was already implicit in Da Tagte Es, preceding Stirrings Still by more than fifty years: doubtless, then, Nixon is right to suggest that Walther proved to be an enabling instance as Beckett formulated his own endeavour to confront the recent death of his father (263). This instance was mediated not only by Walther, but by Robertsons canonical survey of an apparently proto-nationalistic Walther, itself a title found in Becketts undergraduate syllabus, The Trinity College Dublin Calendar for the Year 1923-24. It was not until some ten years later, however, that Becketts grasp of the European grand traditionas he said in convincing his friend, Avigdor Arikha, to accept a commission to paint the Queen Mothermay be said to crystallise. 11 Over this decade, first as an undergraduate at T.C.D., followed by a lengthy flirtation with academia, and then an intense period of self-directed study to the mid-1930s, Beckett, above all, researched the development, or rather, the system, of Western thinking. Subjects covered over many hundreds of pages in Becketts handwritten notes from this period include an impressive range of histories on European literature, art, psychology, philosophy; and therein, more specific areas of focus such the German Enlightenment, the philosophy of Arnold Geulincx, painting from the Netherlands, and Christian iconoclasts (including Porphyry, Dante, Thomas Kempis and Robert Burton). There overtly, here allusively, many of these interwar notes on the European cultural tradition made their way into Becketts writings, meaning that there is something of the latter in the lament of the narrator in All Strange Away: Fortunately my father died when I was a boy, otherwise I might have been a professor, he had set his heart on it. A very fair scholar I was too, no thought, but a great memory. 12
In returning to his fathers death, All Strange Away reveals a kind of Chapter One
6 theme across Becketts writing, an attempted (and not always successful) supplanting of what the poem Gnome called the loutishness of learning with a quietistic melancholy (Collected Poems, 7). That is, no longer talking about mourning, but giving a form to the thing itself, in kinship with what Beckett notoriously wrote of Joyce in the 1929 essay DanteBruno.Vico..Joyce: His writing is not about something; it is that something itself (Disjecta, 27). For unsurprisingly, Joyce is yet another canonical influence lurking in Becketts superficially autarkic Da Tagte Es of 1933/34. Less than two years previously, just as Beckett was moving back into the Joyce circle following laffair Lucia, the proximate birth of Joyces grandson and death of his father prompted Ecce Puer, what Ellmann calls his most moving poem (646). 13 Joyces meditation ends:
Young life is breathed Upon the glass, The world that was not Comes to pass.
A child is sleeping; An old man gone. O, father forsaken, Forgive your son!
As numerous commentators attest, Beckett could not have been unaware of Joyces poem at the time of writing Da Tagte Es. 14 And by alluding to the tombstone erected by the high priest of literary modernism for his own father, Beckett here reveals his affinity with that canon in the making: modernist experimentalism. With this fusion of old and new, Beckett was to transform this heritage into a literary legacy of his own, a radical art developedas with Becketts larger engagement with the European traditionboth out of and in opposition to the Joycean paradigm:
I realised that Joyce had gone as far as one could in the direction of knowing more, [being] in control of ones material. He was always adding to it; you only have to look at his proofs to see that. I realised that my own way was in impoverishment, in lack of knowledge and in taking away, rather than in adding. 15
Now, having contextualised a few of Becketts developmental influences via the poem Da Tagte Es, these origins need not mean that Ellmann is mistaken in claiming that Beckett is, for his part, sui generis. 16 And for many artists, moreover, Beckett is, in a sense, the start Becketts Literary Legacies 7 of a new tradition in literature, as Harold Pinter famously remarked:
The farther he goes the more good it does me. I dont want philosophies, tracts, dogmas, creeds, ways out, truths, answers, nothing from the bargain basement. He is the most courageous, remorseless writer going and the more he grinds my nose in the shit the more I am grateful to him [.] hes not selling me anything I dont want to buyhe doesnt give a bollock whether I buy or nothe hasn't got his hand over his heart. Well, Ill buy his goods, hook, line and sinker, because he leaves no stone unturned and no maggot lonely. He brings forth a body of beauty. His work is beautiful. 17
In more than forty years since Pinters tribute, artists of all kinds have lined up to work either on, or indeed after, Beckett. Even a partial listing reveals a veritable Whos Who of contemporary art: from Arikhas portraiture to Charles Klabundes illustrations for The Lost Ones or Louis de Brocquys for Stirrings Still; from the composer Morton Feldmans work towards Words and Music to the use of Becketts writing by (especially French) philosophers such as Alain Badiou and Gilles Deleuze; and from the edited Grove Press editions of Becketts work by Auster, Coetzee, Rushdie and Albee, to the outpouring of theatrical collaboration in the recent RTF Beckett on Film production of nineteen plays, including Damien Hurst, Jeremy Irons, Julianne Moore, Anthony Minghella, Michael Gambon, David Mamet, Kristin Scott-Thomas, John Gielgud, and many more. 18 The point is, charting Becketts legacies is no small beer, and even the selection of eleven literary legacies here can only scratch the surface of Becketts truly global impact. A collective approach by contributors, however, allows Becketts Literary Legacies to do exactly this. A shared methodology for charting Becketts influence rather than a shared interpretation of that influence, this feature has been glossed above as falsifiable. To hijack Karl Poppers philosophy on the principles of falsification, such readings of literature, rather than being merely suggestive and subjective interpretations, advance the idea of getting nearer to the truth [verisimilitude]to the search for theories that agree better with the facts. 19 Yet this is no mindless appeal to essentialist reconstructions of the past, against which Beckett so chafed. And although Beckett may rightly be regarded as a misologist doubtful that theories, let alone language, could adequately represent the world, it is important to remember that Beckett also wrote in his 1936/37 German Diaries:
I am not interested in the unification of the historical chaos any more than I am in the clarification of the individual chaos, and still less in the Chapter One
8 anthropomorphisation of the inhuman necessities that provoke the chaos. What I want is the straws, flotsam, etc., names, dates, births and deaths, because that is all I can know. 20
Relatedly, in constructing their readings, surely, literary critics do not have, or should not have, the same creative license as their subjects. It is against, for example, counterfactual connectionsreadings brilliantly lampooned in David Lodges Small World through Persses nightmares over writing a paper on the influence of T. S. Eliot on Shakespeare that Poppers understanding of falsifiablity becomes relevant to literary criticism
(Lodge, 197). Despite ostensibly writing on the philosophy of science, in seeking a demonstrable basis to make assertions as a necessary contextualisation for subsequent exegesis, Poppers approach offers scholarship an overdue palliative:
It characterizes as preferable the theory that tells us more; that is to say, the theory which contains the greater amount of empirical information or content; which is logically stronger; which has the greater explanatory and predictive power; and which can therefore be more severely tested by comparing predicted facts with observations. In short, we prefer an interesting, daring, and highly informative theory to a trivial one. (Popper, 295)
Clearly, this is not the forum for an extended discussion of the principles of falsification, nor of its nascent cousin, often referred to as genetic criticism. 21 In the context of more empirical approaches to interpreting literature, Poppers point is as relevant as it is simple: appealing to inter- subjective data as a precondition for theorising better facilitates the growth of knowledgeeven if that knowledge is itself about not- knowing. 22 Even if implicitly, historically grounding Becketts influence is the shared point of departure for all contributions to Samuel Becketts Literary Legacies. Although not all would share the extent of my own sentiments above, the essays here, ultimately, all commence from empirically defensible connections with Becketts art, which precedes the subsequent interpretations about Becketts influence on authors as diverse as Sarah Kane, Don DeLillo and Paul Muldoon. This central perspective underwrites the structure of the present volume. That is to say, Beckett has influenced each of the writers surveyed here in a falsifiable, verifiable, way: even if that legacy is found to be, paradoxically (and this, again, is Beckett Country), one of absence (Jonathan Ellis), self-recognition (Shane Weller), or exposure to an unspeakable subject (Justin Beplate). Whereas subsequent essays chase Becketts Literary Legacies 9 up this exciting, ghostlike influenceoften precisely in terms of Becketts non-representational literatureI want to remain with the methodological points raised by falsifiable criticism. In doing so, a brief example of the kind of demonstrable literary legacy Beckett has engendered to date is instructive. More to the point, by using the type of empirical anchor employed throughout Samuel Becketts Literary Legacies, the way in which Becketts influences can be critically located within subsequent oftentimes radicalartistic transformations, merits turning toward a relatively little-known legacee as a template for this kind of falsifiable scholarship. Tadeusz Rzewicz (b. 1921), a Jewish poet and playwright said to have revolutionized post-war drama in Poland (Falipowicz, 1), exemplifies a common problem in delineating Becketts literary legacies, for the latter appears to be both everywhere and nowhere in the formers art. Yet this Holocaust survivor and innovative artist remains largely unknown to Anglophone criticism, despite the best efforts of his main English expositor, Adam Czerniawski. 23 In the few of Rzewiczs books translated into English, and the fewer Anglophone academic works on Rzewicz, however, Beckettian sentiments abound; or rather, appear to abound. In rare interviews, for example, Rzewicz has claimed that I was full of worshipful admiration for works of art (the aesthetic experience having replaced the religious), but at the same time there grew within me a contempt for all aesthetic values; consequently, I consciously gave up the privileges that accrue to poetry [] and I turned to the banal truth, to common sense [] I returned to my rubbish heap. Strongly conditioned by Nazi barbarism in Poland during World War Two, Rzewiczs sense of an Endgame for humanityechoing what Beckett called the time- honoured conception of humanity in ruinsresults in a devastating critique of Western values, leading Czerniawski to remark, He regards the entire cultural heritage of the Western World as a construct of semblances and deception that conceals a colossal lie. 24 Seemingly very Beckettian indeed. And Rzewiczs art offers a similar sense of Becketts influence, as with the striking 1965 poem, My Poetry:
explains nothing clarifies nothing makes no sacrifices does not embrace anything does not redeem any hopes [] obedient to its own possibilities and limitations it loses even against itself [] Chapter One
10 it has many tasks to which it will never do justice 25
Yet what does a scholar do with this material, offered without external reference, yet apparently so evocative of Beckett in tone and subject? Is it enough to just leave it at that, as Krapp says? Or is it enough to argue that existential despair and disillusion with the human condition was simply a postwar Zeitgeist, one to which artists frequently subscribed, especially in those countries visited by Carthaginian industrial warfare during the 1940s? In short, is the subjective sense of an affinity between Rzewicz and Beckett, and the fact that the latter was fifteen years older and the far more internationally recognised author, enough to make claims about a literary legacy at work here? In terms of Becketts Literary Legacies, the answer to these questions is no. To merely suggest that Rzewicz and Beckett evoke or compare with each other is not falsifiable: why not make the opposite claim, namely that the two fail to evoke or compare with one another? Both contentions depart from wholly subjective criteria that, without reference to a verifiable connection between the two, cannot be shown to be false. That Beckett seems to be everywhere in Rzewiczs work is not argument enough to show that he may, instead, be nowhere at all; a phantom conjured in the critics, not the artists, imagination. Any approach to Becketts influence upon Rzewicz (let alone the other way around!) is therefore, in Poppers appropriated terminology, not yet a theory able to be either tested or contested. More evidence is therefore necessary. Or to pinch Mark Twains celebrated maxim, Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please. In doing so, trawling for clues through journals off the beaten track soon turns up a suggestive article, one linking Rzewicz to Beckett via Martin Esslins renowned Theatre of the Absurd: Like the plays of Witkacy, Gombrowicz, Beckett, and Ionesco, Rzewiczs dramas are not exclusively literary in seeking to physically express psychic states and abstract qualities. Even more importantly, Halina Falipowiczs Theatrical Reality in the Plays of Tadeusz Rzewicz cites an Anglophone translation of Birth Rate: The Biography of a Play for the Theatre. Here, Rzewicz explicitly relates Becketts drama to his own:
No political treatises, sketches of manners and morals! [] these are secondary matters for the art of the drama. The new art of the dramaafter Witkacy and Beckettmust start from the problem of a new technique for writing plays, not a sensational topic [.] in Beckett for the first time we are witnesses not only to the apparent action, but also to the Becketts Literary Legacies 11 disintegration of this action on the stage [] in Beckett this disintegration is the action. To define this more exactly: the exterior theatre has already become a historical theatre: a theatre whose evolution has come to an endIm not talking about the interpretation of those texts by directors and critics. Thus I divide theatre into exterior theatre and interior theatre. 26
Needless to say, Becketts postwar workthat new art of the dramais also considered interior theatre by Rzewicz. Referring to the latters comment that Beckett is the Shakespeare of our times, Tony Howard then takes this explicit admiration and transforms it into a reading of influence; applying it back, as it were, to Rzewiczs drama itself: he has a very particular debate with Beckett who resonates across plays like The Card Index, The Interrupted Act; and moreover, Happy Days became the nucleus of The Old Woman Broods (1969), his redrafting of Becketts vision in which a bag lady gives birth in the rubbish dump we are making of the planet. 27
With such critical guidance in hand, the radical experimentalism and minimalistic bathos of Tadeusz Rzewiczs art emerges as a demonstrable literary legacy from Samuel Beckett. Or rather, to put the horse before the cart, the falsifiable influence of Beckett upon Rzewicz facilitates consequent interpretations like mine (that sense of a shared radical experimentalism and minimalistic bathos). The above Polish scholars have, in a sense, empirically facilitated my subsequent theoretical linking of Beckett with Rzewicza connection of two major postwar writers still awaiting proper treatment. Suffice it to say here that Rzewiczs theatre contains fascinating echoes of Becketts, with the latter figuring as a silent comrade in arms combating Classical plays with both the comedy and melancholy of new theatre. Interestingly, by way of brief example, Rzewicz interrupts the second act of his 1963 The Interrupted Act, a play taking as its themes loss, incapacity, and the impossibility of dramatically representing these, with a three page authorial NOTE. This authorial aside is an extraordinary, veiled defense of Beckett against those metaphysical beagles and their mystificationproducers and critics, of coursethrough sentiments the latter might well recognise:
these same people suddenly become impoverished realists and deride the poet-dramatist who dared to place people in rubbish bins, in the ground or in urns. They raised no objections to people being placed in hell or heaven but they cant come to terms with people who entertain themselves with conversation on a rubbish heap. This is strange indeed! 28
Chapter One
12 This vision of ruined, or rather rubbished, humanity itself derives in no small measure from Rozewiczs personal history. Like Paul Celan, Rzewicz was a victim of Nazi racism during World War Two, and felt the need to approach this (particularly) inexpressible experience in stark, uncompromising language. Yet at the same time, and perhaps by way of a tentative response, Rzewiczs appropriation and literary employment of Sam, and elsewhere B.much like Friederike Mayrckers likely allusion to Beckett as Samuel in Stilleben (and, as Van Hulle makes clear, as S. in her drafts toward that 1991 novel)appears as a literary approach to veiling Becketts presence here, at the ends of representational literature; and maybe, for these authors, here, at the ends of human existence. The interplay of these artistic concerns about the postwar world, and about the ungraspable nature of the modern world and the chafing need to bear witness to human existence after the Holocaust (as Nixon writes of Celans poetry), is visible both in Becketts writings and, it seems, as part of his literary legacyparticularly as suggested in this volume by Nixon and Van Hulles essays. This also may be witnessed in Rzewiczs drama, as with his 1979 play Whats More Whats Less, which invokes Sam (and also the 1960 How It Is) as a way of negotiating the paradoxes of speech and silence; of life and representing life; of going on after the realities of Auschwitz-Birkenau:
He: Youve noticed havent you theres more and more everything but less and less us? I: do you still write Sam? He: in one of my stories the hero keeps his finger stuck up his arse. I: can heroes keep their fingers up their arses? He: not on a monument just in life. I: youve noticed havent you Sam your problems are at deaths door disintegrating the heros dying not waving a banner but with a finger up his arse . [.] He: I was born in a grave theres less and less of me in Paris 29
It is precisely this triangulation of Becketts oeuvre, its artistic employment by a subsequent author, and the critical opportunities offered by falsifiable criticism, that Becketts Literary Legacies explores. As with Rzewicz, Becketts influence on the selection of writers examined here extends to both form and content. Yet as Shane Weller makes clear in the ensuing chapter, Beckett/Blanchot: Debts, Legacies, Affinities, delineating influence is no easy matterparticularly with respect to Becketts literary contemporaries. One such figure, Maurice Blanchot, presents especial challenges to documenting literary debts, let alone Becketts Literary Legacies 13 legacies. In confronting these interpretative problems regarding a Beckett- Blanchot correspondence, Weller sets the stage for chapters, while at the same time remaining cautious about making too many assertions in Beckett Country. This sense is also given over by the next two essays, relocating this now-globalised Beckett within an Irish context. In Absence as Influence: Samuel Beckett and Paul Muldoon, Jonathan Ellis considers both the playful surface of Muldoons references to Beckett (for example, His Nibs Sam Bethicket), in addition to finding a deeper linguistic affinity connecting the two. Becketts paradoxically absent presence is encountered as a consolation in Muldoons poetry and, for Ellis, raises the spectre of artistically articulating grief, of expressing the inexpressible, in this case through elegiac poetry. As has also been previously discussed, Justin Beplate commences his chapter on John Banville, Like an idiot at High Mass: Beckettian Motifs in John Banvilles Art Trilogy, through the divergent Joyce and Beckett, convincingly demonstrating that Banville was a partisan for the former. This influence itself recalls Muldoons characterisation of Beckett as the Lord of Liminality. For Beplate finds that, in Banvilles novels, Beckett mediates inner and outer worldsdescribed in the 1936 Murphy as the Geulingian distinction between little and big worldsthrough the refuge afforded by non-representative art. But such writing after being does not preclude the dangers of linguistic aporia, contradiction and literary mimesis, tropes treated both in Banvilles Art Trilogy and Beplates analysis of it. These essays are followed by groundbreaking scholarship on two Nobel Laureates; Kenzaburo Oe receiving the award 25 years after Beckett, and J. M. Coetzee doing so nine years later, in 2003. In his analysis of another Beckett-influenced trilogy, Yoshiki Tajiris Transforming the Pseudo-Couple: Beckett in Kenzaburo Oes Good-Bye My Book! focuses closely upon the 2005 book in his title, forming the last of Oes Changeling Trilogy (or Pseudo-Couple Trilogy), one not yet available in English. Here, the debt to Beckett in Good-Bye My Book! may have been reignited by the recent death of Yasunari Takahashi, a pioneer of Beckett Studies in Japan and long-standing friend of Oe, who, in 2002, offered a eulogy at Takahashis funeral. Locating Becketts influence upon Oe through the structural employment of ghost-like doubles forming a recurrant pattern in both writers work, Tajiri appeals to the European tradition in approaching the Japanese Laureates artistic employment of doubleness. By contrast, Steven Matthews chapter, Rhythms of Doubt: J. M Coetzee and Samuel Beckett, finds in Becketts influence upon Coetzee a much more explicit and personal relationship. For not only Chapter One
14 did Coetzees encounter with Watt earn him a PhD., it earned an equally prestigious place in the 2002 memoir Youth for Becketts wartime novel, as both hilarious narrative and creative catalyst. But for Matthews, it is Coetzees imagining of Beckett as an outsider, as a reflexive de- creatorin stark contrast to his more quantitative doctorate, The English Fiction of Samuel Beckett: An Essay in Stylistic Analysisthat comes to inform Coetzees art both aesthetically and, indeed, politically. The following three chapters, forming a miniature trilogy of their own, consider Becketts influence on authors writing in German. The first of these, BeckettJoyceMayrcker und kein Ende, returns to the Joyce-Beckett dichotomy; this time transposed to an Austrian context. Through a paradigmatic example of genetic criticism, Dirk Van Hulle centres upon Friederike Mayrckers archival holdings in Vienna for evidence of direct, manuscript engagement with Becketts art. These are identified and subsequently tied to Stilleben [Still Life] and Magische Bltter [Magic Pages]neither, again, available in English to date through a familiar engagement with failure, liminality, and what H. Porter Abbott has called autography, all of which Van Hulle discerns in Mayrckers own Beckettian legacy. Another overtly empirical approach is taken by Friedhelm Rathjen, who investigates the similarly untranslated Jrg Laederach, an experimental Swiss writer who, like Paul Muldoon, offers a thicket of textual references to recent canonical writers. But via his own correspondence with the author, Rathjen elicits a close affinity with Becketts writing in 69 Ways To Play Sam Again: Beckettiana in Jrg Laederachs Works and Letters. Especially in longer prose like Worstward Ho, Rathjen suggests that it is the radical nature of that literature of the unword that Laederach admires in Beckett: Although Becketts becoming silent seems inherent in his work and thus to be the most logical in the history of literature, I could hear him talk on forever. 30
In like vein, Paul Celan remarked of Beckett thats probably the only man here I could have had an understanding with; the here perhaps italicised by the Romanian poets suicide only a month later. As is considered in Text-void: Silent Words in Samuel Beckett and Paul Celan, although never meeting (despite inhabiting the same city for a generation) fellow expatriate Parisians Celan and Beckett shared a post- Holocaust sensitivity largely at variance with dominant artistic trends after the Second World War. As Nixon shows, Theodor Adornos writings on this poetic survival after 1945 located in these two writers an honesty denied virtually everyone else. By empirically linking Celan to Becketts worksmost notably The Unnamable, which Celan had his French class at the Ecole Normale Superieure (attempt to!) translate into German Becketts Literary Legacies 15 Nixons essay finds that the dispassionate and opaque writing of both men bears stoic witness to the destructive capacities of the modern world. This stoicism is certainly found by the final three Anglophone legacees comprising Becketts Literary Legacies. In fact, it is Sarah Kanes reading of Beckett that Liz Barrytaking her cue from several of Kanes own interviewscasts in terms of a theatrical inheritance, one derived from classical tragedy and extending back to the Ancient Greeks. But as Beckett, Sarah Kane and the Theatre of Catastrophe makes clear, this stoic resignation need not divest itself of the gallows humour Kane discerns in Becketts plays, kitted out as it is with all the expletives of contemporary life. This absurd approach to modern drama substantially narrows the gulf between form and content for both playwrights, while also giving rise to a similar, non-realist attitude undertaken as a means to address this problematic. And as Barry intruigingly suggests, by starkly facing the catastrophic Endgame of nuclear modernity, Beckett is, perhaps for the first time, aligned in Kanes writing with an historic Stoic tradition helping to address this very contemporary concern. Indeed, the empirical link between Beckett and Stoicism has only recently been catalogued by scholars, forming as they do a portion of Becketts newly-released interwar notes One such passage, an entry entitled Epictetus in Becketts German Exercise book, dated 11 August 1936, is translated and presented here for the first time:
Wenn du dich verbessern willst, so hre auf, auf diese Art mit dir selbst zu reden: wenn ich meine Geschfte versume, werd ich keinen Lebensunterhaltung [sic] haben; wenn ich meinen Diener nicht strafe, wird er zu einem Taugenichts. Den lieber Angst- und Kummerfrei Hungers sterben, als unruhig im Ueberfluss zu leben; und lieber einem schlechten Diener haben, als unglcklich zu sein. Probier es doch erst mit Kleinigkeiten. Wird etwas Oel verschttet oder gestohlen, so sage dir: So viel kostet die Ruhe; umsonst ist nur der Tod. Und wenn du deinen Diener rufst, bedenke, dass er vielleicht nicht kommen wird; und wenn er auch kommt, dass er vielleicht nicht so tun wird, als du es von ihm verlangst. In der Lage zu sein, dich berhaupt stren zu knnen, passt ihm schlecht, und dir noch viel schlechter.
[If you want to improve yourself, then stop talking to yourself in this way: If I neglect my business I will have no livelihood, if I do not punish my servant he will become a good-for-nothing. For it is better to die of hunger free from fear and care than to live a life of anxiety in the lap of luxury. And it is better to have a bad servant than to be unhappy. Try it out with little things first. If some oil is spilled or stolen say to yourself: This is the cost of peace of mind; the only thing that comes free is death. And when you call your servant, think that he only might come, and that if he comes, Chapter One
16 he might not do what you ask. To put yourself in the position where he can disturb you does not suit him and suits you even less.] 31
But if death is free, crawling out from Becketts enormous shadow can be particularly costly in terms of artistic development, as Paul Auster has recognised: I was in a sense crushed by Beckett. It took me a while to get out from under the burden of Beckett. As is also revealed in Catherine Morleys account, The Book of Allusions: Where is Samuel Beckett in Paul Austers The New York Trilogy?, Becketts influence upon Auster allowed the young American writer to find his own voice in The New York Trilogy, one nonetheless in key with familiar Beckettian themes: solitude, dislocation, in addition to the pulp fiction detective elements and triptych format incorporated into both trilogies fragmented narratives. By comparing trilogies in a manner similar to Tajiris analysis of Kenzaburo Oe, Morley finds that Austers investigation of traditional metaphysical questions of identitydiscussed through the literary employment of Doppelgngers, the failures of expression, and other themes taken up in several essays in this volumeowes much to the philosophical fictions of Molloy, Malone Dies, and The Unnamable; along with Waiting for Godot, those centrepieces of Becketts postwar leap to fame. In the final essay, Stirring from the field of the possible: Beckett, DeLillo, and the Possibility of Fiction, Peter Boxall returns to the issue of how to write after Beckett; the suggestion being, therefore, that Beckett is in some sense the last writer, the artist at the very perimeter of experimental literature, of non-representational art, and perhaps even of linguistic expression. In keeping with previous contributions, Boxall argues for a generative relationship between his comparative case study, Don DeLillo, and Beckett, finding that the former, like Paul Auster, needed to find a way to go on creating after texts like Endgame and Worstward Ho. DeLillo, in Boxalls analysis, finds a tentative, paradoxical way of proceedingand indeed, of going on over thousands of pages after the near-impossible journey taken by Becketts revolutionary writing. Boxall thus concludes this volume through explicit engagement with a question lurking throughout: Can Beckett even have a literary legacy? Stoic, funny, bathetic, melancholy, hard, easy, stark, philosophical, psychological, pathological and on and on: what, finally, was Becketts message from which to draw a legacy? If, as Rzewicz suggests in The Interrupted Act (and as many others have taken it upon themselves to subsequently point out), weartists, critics, actors, directors, even the wider publichave not yet properly understood Beckett, how can we possibly make sense of his oeuvre? To be sure, that Samuel Beckett has meant so many different things to Becketts Literary Legacies 17 so many different people is obvious in both the contributors and their authors voices throughout Becketts Literary Legacies. In the generation since Becketts death, that there is no one answerand certainly not a falsifiable one!to such interpretative quandaries is doubtless a good, or rather, not such a bad, thing. Yet in using a more empirical approach as a basis for intertextual comparison here, the contributors do offer a shared methodology; and furthermore, they also offer a shared sense that Becketts artistic project was at the very outer remove of expression; that this is as far, or very nearly as far, as literature can go. If Joyce was literary modernisms high priest, Beckett, then, was its undertaker. And if Beckett wrote a kind of eulogy for the Western tradition of literature (of which he was paradoxically a part) in his postwar art in the wake of that celebrated artistic vision at last, perhaps his legacy does somehow represent The End:
The sea, the sky, the mountains and the islands closed in and crushed me in a mighty systole, then scattered to the uttermost confines of space. The memory came faint and cold of the story I might have told, a story in the likeness of my life, I mean without the courage to end or the strength to go on. 32
Notes 1 John Montague, A Few Drinks and A Hymn. 2 Samuel Beckett, Malacoda, in Collected Poems, 26. Da Tage Es is also reprinted in Collected Poems, 27. 3 For a discussion of the distinction between Becketts pseudo-couples and the nineteenth century tradition of Dppelgangers in Western literature, see Yoshiki Tajiris Transforming the Pseudo-Couple: Beckett in Kenzaburo Oes Good-Bye, My Book! in this volume. 4 Montague, A Few Drinks and A Hymn. 5 This argument is also made by Pascale Casanova, who argues Becketts was a genuinely autonomous literature, freed from the imperatives of representation in order to inaugurate a different branch of literary modernity (105-6); besides, the title to this book is clear enough, too: Samuel Beckett: Anatomy of Literary Revolution. 6 Samuel Beckett, Krapps Last Tape, in The Complete Dramatic Works; James Knowlson, Damned to Fame, 352-53. 7 Samuel Beckett to Israel Shenker (on 5/5/1956), reprinted in Graver and Federman, eds., Samuel Beckett: The Critical Heritage, 148. For more on Joyce and Beckett, see the latters interviews with Gabriel DAuberede and Tom Driver in ibid.; see also Friedhelm Rathjen, ed., In Principle, Beckett is Joyce; and more recently, Colleen Jaurretche, ed., Beckett, Joyce and the Art of the Negative. Chapter One
18 8 For example, see Enoch Braters Intertextuality in Lois Oppenheim, ed., Palgrave Advances in Samuel Beckett Studies, 30-44; John Pilling, A Samuel Beckett Chronology; see also Samuel Beckett Today/AujourdHui 3, subtitled Intertexts in Becketts Work. 9 See Mark Nixon, Scraps of German: Samuel Beckett reading German Literature. 10 For more on Becketts interwar scavenging of scholarly texts, see my Becketts Books, ch. 2. 11 Atik, Anne, How it was, 117. 12 Samuel Beckett, All Strange Away, in The Complete Short Prose, 158. For details of Becketts notes from this period, see Beckett Today/AujourdHui 16, subtitled Catalogues of Becketts reading notes and other manuscripts at Trinity College Dublin, with supporting essays. 13 For details on Becketts relationship with Lucia Joyce, see Knowlsons Damned to Fame, ch. 5. 14 See Ruby Cohn, A Beckett Canon, 61; C. A. Ackerley and S. E. Gontarski, The Faber Companion to Samuel Beckett, 126; and John Pilling, Beckett Before Godot, 88-91. 15 Knowlson, Damned to Fame, 352. 16 For a host of other views of Beckett, see the Grove Atlantic website at: www.groveatlantic.com/grove/bin/wc.dll?groveproc~genauth~56~0~info~praise. 17 Harold Pinter, Beckett, in John Calder, ed., Beckett at 60, 86. 18 See, for example, Fionnuala Croke, ed., Samuel Beckett: A Passion for Paintings; James and Elizabeth Knowlson, eds., Beckett Remembering / Remembering Beckett; and the website http://www.beckettonfilm.com (last accessed 29/4/07). 19 Karl Popper, Truth, Rationality and the Growth of Knowledge, in Conjectures and Refutations, 326. 20 Knowlson, Damned to Fame, 244. Beckett jotted misology = hatred of theories in his 1930s Whoroscope notebook; for further details, see my Becketts Books: A Cultural History of Samuel Becketts Interwar Notes, 7. 21 For a discussion of genetic criticism, see Genetic Criticism: Texts and Avant- Textes, edited by Jed Deppman, Daniel Ferrer, and Michael Groden. Dirk Van Hulles introduction to Beckett the European also discusses some of these issues in relation to Beckett. 22 For further discussion of the seemingly paradoxical relation between Becketts scepticism and Poppers view of the growth of knowledge, see my Beckett and Popper, or, What Stink of Artifice. 23 See, for example, Adam Czerniawski in Tadeusz Rzewicz, Conversation with the Prince, 11-22. 24 M. J. Krysnki and R. A. Maguire, Translators Introduction, in Tadeusz Rzewicz, Survivor and Other Poems, xi and x; Samuel Beckett, The Capital of the Ruins, in The Complete Short Prose, 278. 25 Rzewicz, Survivor and Other Poems, 145. 26 Falipowicz, Halina, Theatrical Reality in the Plays of Tadeusz Rzewicz, 457- 58; Tadeusz Rzewicz, Birth Rate: The Biography of a Play for the Theatre, 73. Becketts Literary Legacies 19 27 Tony Howard Fragments from a Personal File: The Internal Theatre of Tadeusz Rzewicz, in Tadeusz Rzewicz, Reading the Apocalypse in Bed, 14. 28 Tadeusz Rzewicz, The Interrupted Act, in ibid., 118-19. 29 Tadeusz Rzewicz, Whats More, Whats Less, in Reading the Apocalypse in Bed, 299-300. 30 Samuel Beckett, German Letter of 1937, in Disjecta, 173; Jrg Laederach, letter to Friedhelm Rathjen of 11 January 1989, cited in 69 Ways To Play Sam Again: Beckettiana in Jrg Laederachs Works and Letters, in this volume. 31 Clare Street Notebook, RUL MS 5003, 39 and 41; private translation I am especially grateful to Edward Beckett, the Beckett International Foundation, and Reading University Library for permission to cite this notebook, and also to Mark Nixon for his assistance with this passage. 32 Samuel Beckett, The End, in The Complete Short Prose, 99. Bibliography Ackerley, C. J., and S. E. Gontarski, eds., The Faber Companion To Samuel Beckett (London: Faber and Faber, 2006). Atik, Anne, How it was: a memoir of Samuel Beckett (London: Faber and Faber, 2001). Beckett, Samuel, The Clare Street Notebook, Beckett International Foundation, Reading University Library (RUL MS 5003). . Collected Poems (London: Calder, 1999). . The Complete Dramatic Works (London: Faber and Faber, 1990). . The Complete Short Prose, ed. S. E. Gontarski (New York: Grove Press, 1995). . Disjecta; Miscellaneous Writings and a Dramatic Fragment, ed. Ruby Cohn (New York: Grove Press, 1984). Calder, John, ed., Beckett at 60: A Festschrift (London: Calder & Boyars, 1967). Casanova, Pascale, Samuel Beckett: Anatomy of Literary Revolution (London: Verso, 2006). Cohn, Ruby, A Beckett Canon (Ann Arbor: University Michigan Press, 2004). Croke, Fionnuala, ed., Samuel Beckett: A Passion for Paintings (Dublin: Paul Hoberton Publishing, 2007). Deppman, Jed, Daniel Ferrer, and Michael Groden, eds., Genetic Criticism: Texts and Avant-Textes (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004). Ellmann, Richard, James Joyce (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1982). Falipowicz, Halina, Theatrical Reality in the Plays of Taduesz Rzewicz, in Slavonic and East European Journal 26/4 (Winter 1982), 447-59. Chapter One
20 Feldman, Matthew, Becketts Books: A Cultural History of Samuel Becketts Interwar Notes (London: Continuum, 2006). . Beckett and Popper, or, What Stink of Artifice: Some Notes on Methodology, Falsifiability and Criticism in Beckett Studies, in Samuel Beckett Today/ Aujourdhui 16 (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2006), 373-91. Graver, Lawrence, and Raymond Federman, eds., Samuel Beckett: The Critical Heritage (London: Routledge, 1997). Hulle, Dirk Van, ed., Beckett the European (Tallahassee: Journal of Beckett Studies Books, 2005). Jaurretche, Colleen, ed., Beckett, Joyce and the Art of the Negative, European Joyce Studies 16 (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2005). Knowlson, James, Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett (London: Bloomsbury, 1996). Knowlson, James and Elizabeth Knowlson, eds., Beckett Remembering / Remembering Beckett (London: Bloomsbury, 2006). Lodge, David, Small World (London: Penguin Books, 1985). Montague, John, A Few Drinks and a Hymn, in New York Times Late Edition, 17 April 1994, available at: http://www.samuel- beckett.net/beckett_hymn.html Nixon, Mark, Scraps of German: Samuel Beckett reading German Literature, in Samuel Beckett Today/ Aujourdhui 16 (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2006), 259-82. Oppenheim, Lois, ed., Palgrave Advances in Samuel Beckett Studies (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2004). Pilling, John, Beckett Before Godot (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997). . A Samuel Beckett Chronology (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2006). Popper, Karl, Conjectures and Refutations (London: Routledge, 2002). Restivo, Giuseppina, Melencolias and Scientific Ironies in Endgame: Beckett Walther, Drer, Musil, in Samuel Beckett Today/ Aujourdhui 11 (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2000), 103-13. Rathjen, Friedhelm, ed., In Principle, Beckett is Joyce (London: Split Pea Press, 1994). Robertson, John G., A History of German Literature (London: William Blackwood & Sons, 1902). Rzewicz, Taduez, Birth Rate: The Biography of a Play for the Theatre, in The Performing Arts Journal 1/2 (Autumn 1976), 67-75. . Conversations with the Prince (London: The Anvil Press).
Collected Plays of Anton Chekhov (Unabridged): 12 Plays including On the High Road, Swan Song, Ivanoff, The Anniversary, The Proposal, The Wedding, The Bear, The Seagull, A Reluctant Hero, Uncle Vanya, The Three Sisters and The Cherry Orchard