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Beckett and Coetzee: alternative identities
- Source :
- Literator, Vol 32, Iss 1, Pp 1-20 (2011)
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- AOSIS, 2011.
-
Abstract
- Coetzee’s scholarly interest in Beckett, and his aesthetic interest in the same (which carries a strong measure of readily acknowledged influence), diverge in the case Coetzee presents in a recent mini-biography cum autobiography, “Samuel Beckett in Cape Town – an imaginary history” (Coetzee, 2006:74-77), where both he and Beckett are imagined as having experienced alternative pasts in South Africa. Considering this acknowledged influence, which Coetzee (1992b) mentions in an interview with David Attwell in “Doubling the point”, one might assume that it followed an initial scholarly interest in Beckett(Coetzee’s Ph.D. was on Beckett, and was completed years before he himself became a creative writer). However, in the case at hand this causal sequence is broken, because the doubled Coetzee, though under the spell of Beckett’s prose, does not wish to do scholarly work on the doubled Beckett. What is it about Coetzee’s imagined Beckett that has this effect on him? And why is it that Coetzee engages in such metafictional blurred doubling when it comes to himself and Beckett? This article attempts to shed light on the problems that surround Coetzee’s crafted interaction between authors who are also (in this rather odd context) characters.
- Subjects :
- Literature
Linguistics and Language
Defamiliarisation
Literature and Literary Theory
business.industry
Samuel
lcsh:PL8000-8844
Philosophy
Wish
Spell
Biography
Context (language use)
lcsh:African languages and literature
Language and Linguistics
Antigrammar
Metafiction
Creative writing
Scholarly work
business
Beckett
Autobiography
The Imaginary
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 22198237 and 02582279
- Volume :
- 32
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Literator
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b8d990fb965706c27c35fae538070d80
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.4102/lit.v32i1.1