Beyond imagination: an alternative cruelty in Samuel Beckett's drama

The sensorial experience is a significant element in Samuel Beckett’s works and has led to much scholarship being done on it, with many of them particularly focusing on embodiment/disembodiment, absence/presence, and silence/sound. When discussing the spectator’s sensorial experience, a notable piec...

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Main Author: Chin, Eunice Shi Xian
Other Authors: Chiang Hui Ling Michelle
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181029
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1810292024-12-03T05:20:50Z Beyond imagination: an alternative cruelty in Samuel Beckett's drama Chin, Eunice Shi Xian Chiang Hui Ling Michelle School of Humanities michellechiang@ntu.edu.sg Arts and Humanities Sensorial spectatorship Samuel Beckett Antonin Artaud Cruelty The sensorial experience is a significant element in Samuel Beckett’s works and has led to much scholarship being done on it, with many of them particularly focusing on embodiment/disembodiment, absence/presence, and silence/sound. When discussing the spectator’s sensorial experience, a notable piece of work is Antonin Artaud’s concept of the Theater of Cruelty, created “in order to restore an impassioned convulsive concept of life” (Artaud 81). Cruelty here refers to a sensory disruption – a pure, detached and implacable feeling exercised in the torture and trampling down of everything (114) – using explicit and intense gestures, sounds and images to shock the spectator. It can thus be said that Artaudian cruelty works because the images presented go against the familiar to provoke such discomfort. However, I propose that Beckett’s dramatic works, specifically his radio plays, demonstrate how the same can also be achieved through the opposite. Compared to Artaudian cruelty, the cruelty created in Beckett’s works draws upon the minimal to provoke the same effects. This approach could possibly be more effective as there are no pre-existing images for the mind to use as a reference, relying purely on sensation. Beckett’s works often rely on the unseen and unsaid, thus creating a negative space where the imagination is activated, and intuition is heightened. This thesis will therefore argue for an alternative cruelty that goes beyond the Artaudian form. It creates a sensorial experience that ultimately guides us towards an intuitive mode of spectating. Here, we are pushed to our limits to a “pure, detached and implacable feeling” (114), and towards a lived reality beyond epistemological structures when absence can mean more than presence, and where we can aspire towards an unmediated access to experience. Master's degree 2024-11-12T02:23:19Z 2024-11-12T02:23:19Z 2024 Thesis-Master by Research Chin, E. S. X. (2024). Beyond imagination: an alternative cruelty in Samuel Beckett's drama. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181029 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181029 10.32657/10356/181029 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Arts and Humanities
Sensorial spectatorship
Samuel Beckett
Antonin Artaud
Cruelty
spellingShingle Arts and Humanities
Sensorial spectatorship
Samuel Beckett
Antonin Artaud
Cruelty
Chin, Eunice Shi Xian
Beyond imagination: an alternative cruelty in Samuel Beckett's drama
description The sensorial experience is a significant element in Samuel Beckett’s works and has led to much scholarship being done on it, with many of them particularly focusing on embodiment/disembodiment, absence/presence, and silence/sound. When discussing the spectator’s sensorial experience, a notable piece of work is Antonin Artaud’s concept of the Theater of Cruelty, created “in order to restore an impassioned convulsive concept of life” (Artaud 81). Cruelty here refers to a sensory disruption – a pure, detached and implacable feeling exercised in the torture and trampling down of everything (114) – using explicit and intense gestures, sounds and images to shock the spectator. It can thus be said that Artaudian cruelty works because the images presented go against the familiar to provoke such discomfort. However, I propose that Beckett’s dramatic works, specifically his radio plays, demonstrate how the same can also be achieved through the opposite. Compared to Artaudian cruelty, the cruelty created in Beckett’s works draws upon the minimal to provoke the same effects. This approach could possibly be more effective as there are no pre-existing images for the mind to use as a reference, relying purely on sensation. Beckett’s works often rely on the unseen and unsaid, thus creating a negative space where the imagination is activated, and intuition is heightened. This thesis will therefore argue for an alternative cruelty that goes beyond the Artaudian form. It creates a sensorial experience that ultimately guides us towards an intuitive mode of spectating. Here, we are pushed to our limits to a “pure, detached and implacable feeling” (114), and towards a lived reality beyond epistemological structures when absence can mean more than presence, and where we can aspire towards an unmediated access to experience.
author2 Chiang Hui Ling Michelle
author_facet Chiang Hui Ling Michelle
Chin, Eunice Shi Xian
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Chin, Eunice Shi Xian
author_sort Chin, Eunice Shi Xian
title Beyond imagination: an alternative cruelty in Samuel Beckett's drama
title_short Beyond imagination: an alternative cruelty in Samuel Beckett's drama
title_full Beyond imagination: an alternative cruelty in Samuel Beckett's drama
title_fullStr Beyond imagination: an alternative cruelty in Samuel Beckett's drama
title_full_unstemmed Beyond imagination: an alternative cruelty in Samuel Beckett's drama
title_sort beyond imagination: an alternative cruelty in samuel beckett's drama
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181029
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