Earth, World, and the Human Samuel Beckett and the Ethics of Climate Crisis

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 07-2020
Journal Samuel Beckett today/aujourd'hui
Volume | Issue number 32 | 2
Pages (from-to) 207–221
Number of pages 15
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA)
Abstract
This essay reads the ungraspable relation to death in Beckett’s works as a means to think through our contemporary era of climate crisis. Beckett’s singular aesthetics of human finitude can be a powerful resource for thinking the unthinkable. By envisaging finitude in terms of the limits imposed on life by both space and time, this essay seeks to ground the existential framework of Beckett’s oeuvre in terms of an always embedded self. Looking at the short story “The End,” I show how such embeddedness may work to evade totalisation or abstraction in terms of a universal worldview, yet also how it poses problems for any privileging of materiality as such. Beckett’s writings are thereby seen to produce a dynamic ethics between world and earth, the global and the local, life and death.
Document type Article
Note In special issue: Samuel Beckett and the Nonhuman / Samuel Beckett et le non-humain
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1163/18757405-03202005
Downloads
Permalink to this page
Back