
Le silence en maux dans l’œuvre théâtrale de Samuel Beckett
Author(s) -
Marjorie Colin
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
quêtes littéraires
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2657-487X
pISSN - 2084-8099
DOI - 10.31743/ql.167
Subject(s) - silence , nothing , literature , philosophy , art , aesthetics , psychoanalysis , psychology , epistemology
The silence in Beckett’s plays can be interpreted in many different ways. It often shows the anxiety of the characters faced with the vacuity in their lives. Left to themselves, they hardly manage to let go during these recurring silences (marked in an obsessional way in Beckett’s texts with the word "pause" as an absolute punctuation in the theatrical language). So they really feel the silence as the "arising of nothingness ", a sort of gateway to finitude. This silence is also the one appearing among Beckettian couples to reveal the aporia in language: inability to communicate, "doing" instead of (impossible) "saying". This Beckettian "doing" is shown in a conspicuous gestuality which conveys a certain materiality to this silence as well as it tries desperately to fill it. Thus Beckett’s characters act and give silence some substance, incarnating therefore a full-fledged character. Finally, silence can also embody the religious, at least the expectation (of the divine? in Godot particularly?). This silence grows solemn and reveals a suspension in the speech and characters in search of a follow-up. Silence then becomes the opening of an area where everything is possible since nothing has been said yet, implicitly expressing fantasies of joy and salvation.