‘ALL THESE DEMENTED PARTICULARS’. NARRATIVE PROVIDENCE PROVIDES IN SAMUEL BECKETT’S MURPHY Cover Image

‘ALL THESE DEMENTED PARTICULARS’. NARRATIVE PROVIDENCE PROVIDES IN SAMUEL BECKETT’S MURPHY
‘ALL THESE DEMENTED PARTICULARS’. NARRATIVE PROVIDENCE PROVIDES IN SAMUEL BECKETT’S MURPHY

Author(s): Erika Mihalycsa
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies
Published by: Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai

Summary/Abstract: Murphy, Beckett’s first novel to be published, underwent a literary ‘trial’ before coming out in 1938; the publishers’ objections are telling as to the novelistic games the text proposes and, equally, to the readerly expectations and narrative conventions Murphy breaks with. To the publisher’s proposal that Beckett delete or suppress the opening (which, according to the author, was ‘plain sailing enough’), the whole chapter II (Amor Intellectualis quo M. se ipsum amat) as well as the game of chess between Murphy and Mr Endon, Beckett defends what to his old-world publishers must have appeared as his work’s idiosyncrasies, stressing particularly those features that his writing might have seemed short of – compression and structure: ‘…Do they not understand that if the book is slightly obscure it is because it is a compression and that to compress it further can only result in making it more obscure?

  • Issue Year: 53/2008
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 233-246
  • Page Count: 14
  • Language: English
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