Yorkshire Post

Beckett’s interest in politics revealed

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A UNIVERSITY of York academic has shed new light on acclaimed writer Samuel Beckett’s interest in the political events of his time.

Beckett, who was awarded the 1969 Nobel Prize in Literature, was alert to the political work of many groups and individual­s, including Nelson Mandela, the British anti-apartheid movement, the Black Panthers and dissenters imprisoned by the Soviet regime.

He also backed campaigns against censorship and supported human rights movements. The book, Beckett’s Political Imaginatio­n, questions the establishe­d picture of Beckett as apolitical.

Dr Emilie Morin, senior lecturer in the University of York’s Department of English and Related Literature, said: “It was often thought that Beckett had little interest in politics. The common image of him was of a figure detached from the outside world and its concerns.”

Beckett, who died in 1989, is considered one of the most influentia­l playwright­s of the 20th century. His most famous play

Waiting for Godot revolution­ised post-war theatre. “One of the things that drove my research was discoverin­g that he signed many political petitions in his lifetime,” said Dr Morin, who researched and wrote the book over 10 years. “What also interested me was that his name on these petitions mostly went unnoticed.” The book, Beckett’s Political Imaginatio­n, is published by Cambridge University Press and is priced £31.99.

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