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Platonism, General & Miscellaneous Literary Criticism, Irish Literature, French Literature
Wandering and Home by Eyal Amiran — book cover

Wandering and Home

by Eyal Amiran
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Overview

How are we to think of Beckett's fiction? Lyrical, inventive, uncompromising, beautifully precise-an immense achievement—is it really an art that proclaims the disintegration of language and of the imagination, as traditional readings conclude? Eyal Amiran's study demonstrates that Beckett's work does not embody the failure of synthetic vision. Beckett's fiction transposes a large intertextual logic from the Western metaphysics it is said to disown, and so takes its place in a literary and philosophical tradition that extends from Plato to Joyce and Yeats. At the same time, it develops as a serial narrative, from the early novels to the late short fictions, to unravel the story itself that its metaphysical tradition tells.

About the Author, Eyal Amiran

Eyal Amiran is Assistant Professor of English at North Carolina State University and coeditor of Essays in Postmodern Culture (1993).

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Editorials

Booknews

In probing Beckett's fiction, Amiran (English, North Carolina State U.) finds a systematic inner logic, which he says functions within the domain of Western metaphysical tradition--in particular Neoplatonism. He alternates his focus between the intertextual construction of Beckett's work, and its emergence as a serial narrative. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
April 1, 1993
Publisher
University Park, Pa. : Pennsylvania State University Press, c1993.
Pages
240
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780271008608

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