Thursday, November 13, 2008
Rick Cluchey
Herb Blau
Krapp's Last Tape
Texs for Nothing
The voices of “Texts for Nothing” are not merely two, but several. It is certain the entity of the narrator has multiple voices. This is seen when he says, “Ah yes, we seem to be more than one.” However, the use of “they” to refer to the other voices, by the “I” shows that this is not just a conversation including only the self and the body, but rather multiple selves trapped inside a body.
Eh Joe
Film
The expression of the couple, the flower woman, and O shows the “agony of perceivedness.” The film depicts this agony throughout by the mere thought of O trying to escape his own perception of himself. This is obviously impossible because “the self” (E) is the same entity as O. Self perception is a prerequisite to being an existential being. Humans separate themselves from the world around them by noting the change in perception as the world moves around them, which places them in space and time, and it is because of this realization of separateness that O can have a concept of E. Why would O want to escape E in the first place? The realization that one exists also leads to the fear of one not existing anymore. However, because O realizes that he exists E therefore exists and if O can get rid of E (self perception) he can also get rid of the realization that he has the potential to cease existing.
Thursday, October 2, 2008
End Game
Hamm also tells Clov how he will feel when death and time come knocking on his door. He tells him that he will go blind, will be tired, hungry, and then eventually, after the process has been drawn out to be almost unbearable, he will die too, just like Hamm. Infinite emptiness is what awaits in the afterlife, according to Hamm. The total lack of meaning in Hamm's afterlife is the true terror. He may exist, in some spiritual or mental form, maybe. But if he does it will be as a tiny grit in the bigger picture of the next world. Thus, rendering him meaningless and without a purpose or value.
This however is not so different from life now. After Hamm asks, "We're not beginning to...to... mean something?" Clov, finding this funny, says, "Mean something! You and I, mean something! Ah that's a good one!" As Clov sees it he already is meaningless in life, why should death have to have meaning?
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
The End
Sunday, September 28, 2008
The Calmative
In The Calmative Beckett indirectly questions the ability of thought to be outside of the real physical self. Humans are "sunk in themselves" leaving each of us "alone". It seems this lonliness is a result of each of us only being able to communicate what is going on in our skulls incompletely. Though the main character in the story is telling this story from the grave (figuratively). Therefore, he is purely thought without a body. In his story he has a body, but he is telling the story without any indication to the reader that he is an actual physical form as the story teller. This is how his pure thoughts can be alluded to throughout the story.
It is because these interactions with the living in his story are experiencing pure thought that the great majority are scared or do not notice at all. If we really knew what was happening inside a persons skull it would be scary, some of us however pay no attention to the thoughts of others anyway and wouldn't notice the difference.
"Then atlast, before, I fell, first to my knees, as cattle do, then on my face, I was in a throng. I didn't lose consciousness, when I lose consciousness it will not be able to recover. They paid no heed to me, though careful not to walk no me, a courtesy that must have touched me, it was what I had come out for."
In the above passage Beckett makes two major points. Firstly, after all thought is gone, there's no getting it back. Secondly, though people are courteous they ignore him. This demonstrates the mental disconnectedness of individuals, and the perfect contintment of that lack of true interaction between most humans.
"All I say cancels out, I'll have said nothing."
Why then does he tell the story?In order to communicate fully with the reader. Beckett is trying to allow the reader to experience the thought of the main character.
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
The Expelled
A major congruency throughout the story is memory. Beckett indirectly questions the importance of remembering, as well as what it is important to remember. It seems that the narrator has no need for the exact replication of certain events. For example, the steps he has counted a thousand times are only "not many". He says, "The figure has gone from my mind." The figure of the memory seems not to be important in this case. "The important thing to remember is that there were not many, and that I have remembered." The story proceeds from this point to be sometimes precise in its account, while at other times he can't remember a thing. This seems to be directly inverted of his recent priority of memory. It is. The story is details, details, details. Which is why he ends the story telling the reader, "I don't know why I told you this story. I could just as well have told another. Perhaps some other time I'll be able to tell another. Living souls, you will see how alike they are." The narrator assumes that the main theme of any story he tells will be the same and only the unimportant details will change.
Unimportant details seem to comprise the entire story. This is the answer to the question of memory for Beckett. Any story no matter what it is conveys these unimportant details they are "neither the cradle nor the grave of anything whatever". The narrator proceeds to follow the sun to death, just as all memory, all stories, all thought arrives at the death bed. The important thing is living, existing in the moment. "Memories are killing."
Monday, September 8, 2008
Waiting for Godot
Vladimir: Perhaps you weren't. But it's the way of doing it that counts, the way of doing it,
if you want to go on living.
Throughout the entire play they are doing "nothing", at least they are not doing anything productive. Though they are doing "nothing" they are still thinking. Thought and reason are major ideas that Beckett questions in Waiting for Godot. Even though estragon was wasn't doing anything, the way he should be going about it still requires thought and reason.
However, thinking is what seems to keep them existing or "living" as Vladimir puts it. They can't really do nothing, they are trapped by thought. They're bored, they are waiting...in this case for Godot. Estragon comes to this realization saying, "All my lousy life I've crawled about in this mud!" He his stuck in his own thoughts. Estragon depicts the result of thinking when he says, "We always find something, eh Didi, to give us the impression we exist?" I believe this is a major line because Beckett is questioning thought and existence of the human intellect. Thought it seems only gives the intellect the impression of existing.
Finally, on page 91 Vladimir depicts the horrid truth of thought and reason. He says, "All I know is that the hours are long under these conditions, and constrain us to beguile them with proceedings which - how shall I say - which may at first sight seem reasonable, until they become a habit. You may say it is to prevent our reason from foundering. No doubt. But has it not long been straying in the night without end of the abyssal depths? That's what I sometimes wonder. You follow my reasoning?" Their proceedings, their thoughts seem reasonable, but they aren't. Then, in true comic fashion he asks if Estragon has followed yet more of his useless reasoning. The portrayal here is the fact that one cannot try not to think without pondering how to accomplish such means. Thus, it defeats his purpose. In thinking that one should shot thinking one is still trapped in the act of reason and thought.
Beckett's answer to freedom from thought, especially meaningless thought, is there is no escape. Wait to die, then maybe, maybe you can stop, but probably not.