Despite the steady rise in adaptations of Samuel Beckett’s work across the world following the author’s death in 1989, Beckett’s afterlives is the first book-length study dedicated to this creative phenomenon. The collection employs interrelated concepts of adaptation, remediation and appropriation to reflect on Beckett’s own evolving approach to crossing genre boundaries and to analyse the ways in which contemporary artists across different media and diverse cultural contexts – including the UK, Europe, the USA and Latin America – continue to engage with Beckett. The book offers fresh insights into how his work has kept inspiring both practitioners and audiences in the twenty-first century, operating through methodologies and approaches that aim to facilitate and establish the study of modern-day adaptations, not just of Beckett but other (multimedia) authors as well.
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Beckett’s afterlives is the first book-length study dedicated to posthumous adaptations of Beckett’s oeuvre. This collection analyses the remarkable diversity of creative engagements across different media and cultural contexts that have ensured the survival and continuing relevance of Beckett’s work in a constantly changing world.
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Introduction – Pim Verhulst, Anna McMullan and Jonathan Bignell1 Beckett’s ‘adaphatroce’ revisited: toward a poetics of adaptation – Pim Verhulst2 Adaptation and convergence: Beckett on Film – Jonathan Bignell3 ‘Imprecations from the Brighton Road to Foxrock Station’: the effect of place on Mouth on Fire’s stagings of All That Fall – Feargal Whelan4 Engines of reverence? Beckett, festivals and adaptation – Trish McTighe and Kurt Taroff5 Passing by, gazing upon: gendered agency in adaptations of Come and Go and Happy Days – Katherine Weiss6 ‘Last state last version’: adaptation and performance in Gare St Lazare Ireland’s How It Is – Dúnlaith Bird7 Intermedial embodiments: Company SJ’s staging of Beckett’s Company – Anna McMullan8 Beckett, neurodiversity and the prosthetic: the posthuman turn in contemporary art – Derval Tubridy9 Beckett and new media adaptation: from the literary corpus to the transmedia archive – David Houston Jones10 Opera as adaptation: György Kurtág’s Samuel Beckett: Fin de partie, scènes et monologues – Olga Beloborodova11 Questioning norms in three Beckettian choreographic projections: Maguy Marin, Dominique Dupuy, Joanna Czajkowska – Evelyne Clavier12 ‘I’ll give you just enough to keep you from dying’: power dynamics disclosed in Tania Bruguera’s Endgame – Luz María Sánchez Cardona13 Godot noir: Beckett in black and whiteface – S. E. Gontarski14 Deferred dreams: waiting for freedom and equality in Nwandu and Beckett – Graley Herren15 ‘How can you photograph words?’: expanding the Godot universe from adaptation to transmedia storytelling – Luciana Tamas and Eckart Voigts16 The figure of Beckett in four contemporary novels– Paul StewartIndex
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Beckett’s afterlives is the first book-length study dedicated to posthumous reworkings of Samuel Beckett’s oeuvre. Contextualised against the backdrop of the author’s developing views on adaptation and media specificity, it challenges the long-held belief that he opposed any form of genre crossing. Featuring contemporary engagements with Beckett’s work from the UK, Europe, the USA and Latin America, the volume does not approach adaptation as a form of (in)fidelity or (ir)reverence. Instead, it argues that exposing the ‘Beckett canon’ to new environments and artistic practices enables fresh perspectives and enhances the texts’ significance for contemporary artists and audiences alike. The chapters explore a wide variety of forms – from prose and theatre to radio, television, film and webseries – focusing on the period from the early 1990s to the late 2010s. The concept of adaptation is broadly interpreted, including changes within the same performative context, spatial relocations or transpositions across genres and media, and even creative rewritings of Beckett’s biography. The collection offers a range of innovative ways to approach the author’s work in a constantly changing world and analyses its remarkable susceptibility to creative responses. Beckett’s afterlives suggests that adaptation, remediation and appropriation are forms of cultural negotiation that are essential for the survival and continuing urgency and vibrancy of Beckett’s work in the twenty-first century.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781526178961
Publisert
2024-07-30
Utgiver
Vendor
Manchester University Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
288

Biographical note

Jonathan Bignell is Professor of Television and Film at the University of Reading

Anna McMullan is Professor Emerita in Theatre at the University of Reading

Pim Verhulst is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Oxford and a Teaching Assistant at the University of Antwerp