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Long before there was a universe, before there was human life, before there was a divine being, and before there was religion, there was vast emptiness. Some helium, hydrogen, other nuclei, and electrons arose, interacted, and eventually exploded, setting in motion elemental energy, matter, and space. If matter was stuff with mass, energy and space were spontaneously created by an event called the Big Bang, a primordial occurrence that happened around 13.3 billion years ago followed by an expansion of space. As the universe expanded, the space between the galaxies continued to get larger, although at the current time nearby galaxies demonstrate a slower expansion compared to more distant galaxies. In addition to expansion, electrons combined with protons to form neutral hydrogen atoms, and electrons also combined with the helium nuclei in the universe. The Big Bang also produced equal massive amounts of positive and negative energy. As the universe expanded, it began to cool and developed the four basic forces: gravitational force, strong force, weak force, and electromagnetic force. The continued cooling resulted in the separation of the gravitational force from the others that compressed to form the grand unified theory (GUT). The continued separating and cooling led to the evolution of atoms, quarks, and electrons. These items became mixed with photons and other particles. This entire expanding universe was subject to physical laws that are unchangeable and universal. Moreover, the Big Bang marks the beginning of time. This is not time that can be measured by a clock, but it is rather cosmic time measured in millions of years.
During his professional career, Albert Eisenstein concluded that the universe was static, a mistake that he eventually recognized. Instead of a static universe, the Big Bang resulted in an expansion of the universe. Proof for this expansion has been provided by astronomers who have discovered that the galaxies of the universe are moving further away from each other. There is no plan for this expansion, which means that the universe is characterized by chance and uncertainty. Despite such characteristics, some scientists think that there are signs of intelligent life in the universe.
This chapter explores the ways in which Giacomo Leopardi's presence in the manuscripts of Beckett's war-time novel Watt draws the text's Big House pastiche into a pan-European, pessimistic-Romantic tradition sceptical of logic and reason as fundamentally positive human qualities. In doing so, this chapter examines how Beckett's invocation of Leopardi is vital to an underlying political parody in Watt and its manuscripts that takes stock of the troubling relationship between Enlightenment rationality and the barbarism of European fascism.
Keywords: Samuel Beckett; Giacomo Leopardi; W. B. Yeats; Second World War; pessimism; Enlightenment
Samuel Beckett's novel Watt had a turbulent genesis. Begun during the Second World War, the novel went through several phases of composition, from scattered notes to at least two stages of heavy revision of both plot and characters. The Watt notebooks, held in the archives of the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas, Austin, evidence a writing process that both obsessed and frustrated its author.
Before the familiar Watt and Mr Knott entered the story, Beckett's tale centred on an Irish Big House in decline and the trials and tribulations of its owner, James Quin, the last of a long line of aristocrats whose family have succumbed to various ailments and illnesses. Beckett's turn in Watt and its preceding manuscripts to an ironic revision of the Big House novel during the war has been convincingly argued by scholars as a form of historical negotiation that works through the obsessions with order and hierarchy shared (in very different forms) between European fascism and the Anglo-Irish Ascendency ideology of the 1920s and 1930s, particularly as formulated by W. B. Yeats. In these readings, the ‘comic attack on rationality’ typically associated with Watt takes on subtle, interconnected political dimensions.
Crucial to the satire of the Big House that runs through the manuscripts and into the published novel is the pervading sense of emptiness at the heart of seemingly urgent matters, whether it is Quin's family decline or Watt's desperate attempts to uncover the puzzles of the Knott household. This is at its starkest in the manuscripts, where Quin is described as one hounded by ‘nothingness’ in his life, a condition that seems to derive in part from his lack of family but also from his failed attempts to educate himself in European literature and philosophy.
This paper will examine Beckett's lifelong interest in Romance literature and troubadour poetry, and its relation to Italy, beginning with the recalling of some features and lasting effects of his early love affairs with Ethna MacCarthy and Peggy Sinclair. Furthermore, troubadour lyric poetry will be examined as serving Beckett in his search for a poetic language for modernity, which therefore will be set also against the background of key figures of modernism, such as Ford Madox Ford, T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound. References to Beckett's poetic work – which spans from the 1930 ‘Whoroscope’ poem to ‘What is the word’, written shortly before his death – focus on the 1930 lyric collection of Echo's Bones and on how its themes and forms anticipate Beckett's succeeding works.
It will also be contented that the temporal gaps in the poetic output of a long and consistent poetic production are in fact filled through the diffusion and absorption of the lyric mode in Beckett's dramatic and novelistic production, with specific references to Molloy and the Dantean character of Sordello.
Drawing on the seminal work on Beckett's poetry by Laurence Harvey, this paper will examine Beckett's lifelong interest in troubadour poetry, emphasizing how that is, to some degree, also related to Italy. Such an argument will entail examining Beckett's interest in early Romance literature in conjunction with some key figures of modernism, against which his own stance is to be set and interpreted. Additionally, we will touch upon how his interest is manifested not only in a consistent lyric production throughout his whole career but also in the lyric mode of his novelistic production, with specific references to Molloy.
Recalling some biographical details might help define Beckett's bend towards Romance culture, particularly to that of the Middle Ages. It is well known that Thomas Rudmose-Brown, his college teacher of French, was also an admirer of Provençal language and literature, and affiliated with Félibrige, an association that aimed to renew the memory and modern relevance of the old literature and even bring back in use the old language.
This article traces the Italian influences in Beckett's radio plays, beginning with Dante's Divine Comedy and its intertextual significance for All That Fall, Embers and Rough for Radio II in particular. In the next step, these texts are further analysed, together with Words and Music, against the historical backdrop of the Second World War, when radio broadcasting contributed significantly to the rise of Fascism in Europe. Finally, I will read Cascando through a biographical lens, in light of Beckett's 1959 trip to Sorrento, where he attended the Italia Prize awards ceremony accompanied by BBC producer Donald McWhinnie. In doing so, on the one hand, the chapter shows how Beckett used Dante to gradually develop a generic radiophonic space that is marked by a lack of sight and dissociated from any specific geography or nationality. On the other hand, it illustrates how this seeming universality is, at the same time, infused with different cultural contexts that merge almost beyond the point of recognizability. These frameworks are not limited to Ireland, which permeates the early radio plays especially, or France, Beckett's permanent home that put him at further remove from his native country in linguistic terms. Germany, which he visited throughout his career, and by extension Italy, where he spent the least time, should not be neglected as crucial in-between spaces that help to navigate the seeming no man's land of Beckett's later radio plays.
Keywords: Broadcasting; radio drama; Italia Prize (Prix Italia); Dante; Fascism
The influence of Italian culture on Beckett's writing has typically been considered from the following angles: his formal study of the language and its literature at Trinity College Dublin from 1923 to 1927, the private lessons he started taking with Bianca Esposito in 1926, his trip to Florence during the summer of 1927 and his lifelong engagement with the Divine Comedy. This chapter seeks to expand that focus by concentrating on Beckett's radio plays, beginning with Dante and his intertextual significance for All That Fall, Embers and Rough for Radio II. In the next step, I will dwell some more on the latter two, expanded with Words and Music, to situate these works in the historical context of the Second World War, when broadcasting contributed to the spread of Fascism in Europe.
The section of U.S. Highway 93 North that runs through the Flathead Indian Reservation in western Montana spans approximately 56 miles, from about Evaro, MT, in the south, to Polson, MT, in the north. This north-south stretch of U.S. 93 Highway cuts right through one of Montana's primary east-west wildlife migration corridors and, in doing so, “runs through large expanses of wildlife habitat, including the Mission Mountains, the Bob Marshall Wilderness Complex, and the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness Area,” thus fragmenting these habitats and making improved connectivity a priority in this area. Recent infrastructure and corridor-related work along this stretch of highway has helped to restore connectivity in this area and has benefited ecosystems, people, and wildlife in the process.
Just outside of the Evaro area, near Arlee, along Highway 93, travelers will come across what is known as the “Animals’ Trail,” or a 197-foot-wide vegetated bridge, which allows wildlife to safely cross over the highway. The overpass itself is most visible along this stretch of highway; however, it is but one of many wildlife crossings along Highway 93. In short, the wildlife-friendly structures in this area represent the joint efforts of the Montana Department of Transportation (MDT), Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (CSKT), and Federal Highways Administration (FHWA), which worked together to build this infrastructure not only to reduce human-wildlife traffic accidents but also to protect wildlife migration routes. The project was first proposed in 1989 by the MDT, which wanted to expand this section of U.S. 93 into a four-lane highway. The expansion, however, would have extended into the Flathead Indian Reservation, home to the CSKT. Eventually, the FHWA, MDT, and CSKT convened and “established a tri-governmental team to reach an agreement. From that process came a radical idea: instead of focusing on how the road will impact the land, focus on how the land should shape the road. The team called this approach a ‘Spirit of Place.’” These groups worked together productively to improve connectivity in ways that not only increased human safety but were also sensitive to the needs of wildlife, in particular by incorporating traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) and respect for the land, through its focus on the “spirit of place,” which “takes into account the surrounding mountains, plains, hills, forests, valleys, and sky.
Islands have historically been perceived as objects of fascination, locations of romance and adventure, as an ‘allegory of the whole world’ or as ‘the quintessential sites for experimentation’. In real life and online, they may be ‘blank spaces’ in which an owner/occupier develops a culture – landscapes, architecture, values and social practices – that are distinctive, albeit without regard for the values or even life of that space's indigenous inhabitants. They may be edenic or dystopian. They may instead be locations that over time have been remade as reflections of the development of other spaces.
The archipelago of islands in New Horizons represent a cultural stage, shaped both by the hard and soft law discussed in the following chapter and by scope for expression on the part of players, including individuals and corporate entities that are seeking to influence the behaviour of people offline. The cultures evident across the archipelago can accordingly be understood as manifestations of personal autonomy (including performativity of attributes that might otherwise be expressed offline), a Japan-inflected aesthetic and a relief from or reinforcement of the rigours of a global market economy. The stage can also be understood as a subject for academic discontent regarding economic relationships offline, viewing a playscape as an allegory of contemporary capitalism.
Defoe's Island
On a superficial viewing each island – and Animal Crossing islands per se – are potentially blank spaces for inscription through the tastes and engagement of each user, an echo of Daniel Defoe's inf luential 1719 fantasy Robinson Crusoe in which a castaway, a dog, two cats and subservient person of colour remake a deserted island through strenuous effort, ingenuity and good fortune. They are not what Elizabeth Nyman characterised as ‘containers’ from which a player's might want to escape or instead use an opportunity for demonstrating prowess in gaining rewards through killing/disabling hostile characters.
Players enter the game by choosing attributes for their avatar, discussed below, and fictively purchasing the ‘Deserted Island Getaway Package’ from the virtual world's Nook Inc development company. Purchase from a company rather than from a state can be seen as friendlier and less ‘colonial’ than acquiring a licence from a government for occupation and economic development.
Dante, and particularly the Commedia, best represents the ubiquity of Italy in Beckett's oeuvre, providing an intellectual scaffolding and a suite of structuring images in texts ranging from Dream of Fair to Middling Women to Worstward Ho. Italian words and literary allusions also arise at significant points in Beckett's texts, such as ‘lick chops and basta’ at the end of Ill Seen Ill Said, or the cluster of references to Giacomo Leopardi in the Watt manuscript notebooks. One significant Italian allusion is that of the Pantheon in Rome in All Strange Away as an architectural model for the confined space in which the two bodies are observed by the narrator. It is not the only reference to Roman or Italian architecture in Beckett's work – the Villa Doria Pamphili is mentioned in the Watt notebooks, and the Basilica di San Marco in Venice appears briefly in Dream. However, the Pantheon holds a special place in Beckett's architectural vision, not merely due to its exemplary design but as a focal point for Beckett's enduring preoccupation with modes of interment. The figures in All Strange Away are entombed in their suffocating space, which is likened to the ‘beehive tombs’ or Bronze Age tholoi of Greece and Western Asia, and which also recall the medieval monastic clocháns of southwestern Ireland. The Pantheon is situated between these epochal designations and connects them, casting its singular formal perfections across a history of burial, entombment and memorialization. That this particular building is tied so closely to memory and imagination – and their potential extinctions – bestows it with its own memorial function. It becomes an allusion marking a site of remembrance from which careful excavation will exhume textual relics from the living soil into the life-giving air. This essay will explore how the Pantheon, including its history and structure, anchors this terrain across Beckett's work. It will weigh up how Beckett's architecture of interment pivots on sacred places and their proneness to profanation, and how these sites constitute memorial markers that enable loss to dim into forgetting.
Keywords: Pantheon; architecture; tomb; tumulus; dome; masonry; stone
Italy and Italian culture provide some of the most prominent guides to the thematic and aesthetic formations in Beckett's work.