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OverviewSamuel Beckett has long carried the aura of an artist """"damned to fame."""" Known for being a recluse with a profound distaste for publicity, Beckett gained a legendary image, infusing much of the critical attention that his literary work continues to receive. In this highly original and audacious volume, Dilks sharply departs from existing accounts of Beckett’s persona by developing a critical analysis of his life as a professional writer. Focusing on the period between 1929 and 1969, and taking into account published and unpublished letters, advertising materials, photographic portraits, royalty statements, and other archival material, Samuel Beckett in the Literary Marketplace offers a powerful challenge to the received understanding of Beckett as an author shy of fame, averse to self-promotion, and unconcerned with commercial success. Showing how Beckett’s assumptions about professional life were shaped by his socioeconomic upbringing in South Dublin, Dilks illustrates the author’s protracted efforts to develop and sustain a successful career as a professional writer with an enduring legacy. Dilks explores in great detail how Beckett fashioned an authorial persona, shaped public reception of his work, and controlled his business affairs. He shrewdly used agents and professional acquaintances to market himself as an unknown celebrity and to defend and disseminate his public image. Throughout, the book acknowledges Beckett’s self-consciousness about his mythic relationship with the literary marketplace. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Stephen John DilksPublisher: Syracuse University Press Imprint: Syracuse University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.652kg ISBN: 9780815632542ISBN 10: 0815632541 Pages: 376 Publication Date: 05 April 2011 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsBeckett's vaunted disregard for fame and publicity did not prevent him from posing for photographs and monitoring the critical response to his texts, honing techniques learned from Joyce. Dilk's contrarian and impertinent portrait painstakingly documents Beckett's participation in his self-promotion.-- Jean-Michel Rabate, University of Pennsylvania It is long past due for a major revisionist counterpoint to the mainstream view of Beckett as a 'floating head' detached from such concerns as politics and finances.-- P. J. Murphy, author of Beckett's Dedalus: Dialogical Engagements with Joyce in Beckett's Fiction "Beckett's vaunted disregard for fame and publicity did not prevent him from posing for photographs and monitoring the critical response to his texts, honing techniques learned from Joyce. Dilk's contrarian and impertinent portrait painstakingly documents Beckett's participation in his self-promotion.-- ""Jean-Michel Rabat�, University of Pennsylvania"" It is long past due for a major revisionist counterpoint to the mainstream view of Beckett as a 'floating head' detached from such concerns as politics and finances.-- ""P. J. Murphy, author of Beckett's Dedalus: Dialogical Engagements with Joyce in Beckett's Fiction""" Beckett's vaunted disregard for fame and publicity did not prevent him from posing for photographs and monitoring the critical response to his texts, honing techniques learned from Joyce. Dilk's contrarian and impertinent portrait painstakingly documents Beckett's participation in his self-promotion.-- ""Jean-Michel Rabaté, University of Pennsylvania"" It is long past due for a major revisionist counterpoint to the mainstream view of Beckett as a 'floating head' detached from such concerns as politics and finances.-- ""P. J. Murphy, author of Beckett's Dedalus: Dialogical Engagements with Joyce in Beckett's Fiction"" Author InformationStephen John Dilks is associate professor of English and Irish literature at the University of Missouri, Kansas City. He is the coauthor of Cultural Conversations: The Prescence of the Past, and his articles have appeared in such journals as James Joyce Quarterly, Modern Language Studies, and the Journal of Modern Literature. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |