Iser - Malone Dies and Texts For Nothing
Iser - Malone Dies and Texts For Nothing
Iser - Malone Dies and Texts For Nothing
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Wolfgang Iser
John Hollander was alluding to. The more intensely this agent operates,
the more nuanced the emergent becomes. But owing to the incessant
cancellation of what has come into being, none of these phenomena can
congeal into a product. This turns cancellation itself into an emergent
phenomenon, because by discrediting what has emerged, it makes
virtual realities happen. Beckettian negation turns emergence into a
"thought-provoking reality," which, of course, is differently processed
by individual readers. However, it is the performative nature of the
text and not the reader that makes such phenomena happen. In order
to delineate these phenomena and to trace the strategies that make
negations productive, we shall have a look at Mahne Dies and Texts
for Nothing.
II
Erasing Narration: Samuel Beckett's Mahne Dies and Texts for Nothing
Erasure wipes out the stances that are inscribed into every narrative
and are necessary for the depiction of what it is "about." Narration that
has been nullified, however, does not actually eliminate what has been
cancelled, so that the discredited narrative makes Malone's anticipation
of death emerge as an unmediated reality. It is the waiting itself, and
not a conception of what it may mean, that now moves into focus.
We shall now look at how the road to the end is marked out in
the erased narration which, being stripped of any meaning, turns into
a road to annihilation. Malone's self-inspection, and the stories he
keeps telling himself, will provide us with a focus to illuminate what
is made to emerge from the negated narration. If thinking, in Hegel's
terms, is the negation of what is immediately before us, then negation
is at best a concept, which tells us nothing about its operations. But
it is the latter that give salience to a narration that is divested of its
generic features. While thinking is equated with an abstract notion
of negation, art concretizes what such a negation may entail. Hence,
Beckett's narrative is punctured by kaleidoscopically changing shapes
of negation. The unfolding of the latter establishes the internal network
of the text through which something will come into being that hitherto
did not exist. Metaphorically speaking, we might say, the various
ongoing nullifying operations in the novel are the "holes" that Beckett
"bores" into the text.
achieve. Thus he hangs in between and can only cancel what he keeps
saying about himself. "I have tried to reflect on the beginning of my
story. There are things I do not understand. But nothing to signify. I
can go on" (12).
"Going on" means switching to writing. Indulging in such an activity,
however, interferes with his preoccupation with the end, because what
the writing is about is always anterior to writing. Furthermore, he writes
Wolfgang Iser
his immediate present, and this applies even to his effort to diminish
the distance by writing about writing. Therefore he becomes aware that
his notes "have a curious tendency ... to annihilate all they purport to
record" (88).
If his story has nothing to signify, Malone must break away from
himself in order to open himself up for what he wants to happen. This
makes him dissolve into two disconnected evanescent profiles. "My
concern is not with me, but with another, far beneath me and whom
I try to envy, of whose crass adventures I can now tell at last, I don't
know how. Of myself I could never tell, any more than live and tell of
others. How could I have, who never tried? To show myself now, on
the point of vanishing, at the same time as the stranger, and by the same
grace, that would be no ordinary last straw. Then live, long enough to
feel, behind my closed eyes, other eyes close. What an end" (19).
Does this sequence of closing eyes ever come to an end? If the answer
Erasing Narration: Samuel Beckett's Malone Dies and Texts for Nothing
the edited version of life is identical with life itself. Yet as there are no
get outside itself in order to ascertain what it might be. Malone feels
compelled to wipe out his inventions, because by nullifying them he
a process that can never end, although it is the approach of the end that
Wolfgang Iser
Erasing Narration: Samuel Beckett's Malone Dies and Texts for Nothing
applies to the emergence of endlessness, which arises out of an allpervading preoccupation with ending.
This is reinforced by Malone's storytelling. Why does he indulge
in such a buttressing, since the stories repeat what the negations have
revealed? Malone calls his storytelling a way of playing with himself.
"I shall tell myself stories, if I can. They will not be the same kind of
stories as hitherto, that is all. They will be neither beautiful nor ugly,
at the time, is nothing. You think no more about it and you go on.
But I know what darkness is, it accumulates, thickens, then suddenly
bursts and drowns everything" (13). A few lines later we read: "This
is awful" (14), leaving open what the statement refers to. However,
the darkness keeps growing in the stories, though their nesting and
descriptions, and more often than not these details take the narrative in
an unforeseeable direction, thus preventing the welter of incidents from
assuming any meaning. Just as in the overall narrative, what remains
is a truncated narration, and so Malone's stories keep paradoxically
Wolfgang Iser
Erasing Narration: Samuel Beckett's Malone Dies and Texts for Nothing
last prayer, the true prayer at last, the one that asks for nothing" (107).
The stories seem to answer this prayer by making the desired nothing
emerge.
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Wolfgang Iser
interplay is the emergent that Malone Dies brings into existence. What
is remarkable, though, is the fact that while the emergent appears
unbounded, it is given salience in spite of the limitations of a text.
We might be inclined to say endlessness and nothingness do not
occur in life, and thus lack any reality of their own. But we have to
more real than nothing. This may be taken as a warning against any
rush to premature conclusions through the application of our own
standards to what the Beckettian text causes to emerge in terms of our
own standards. As we have seen, it is the performative character of
literature to bring something into being that hitherto did not exist, and
if this appears baffling, it is bound to trigger a prolonged preoccupation
for Nothing. The texts are either unimportant (in the sense of good
did not focus on what the growing nothingness was doing to his stories,
Erasing Narration: Samuel Beckett's Malone Dies and Texts for Nothing
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Wolfgang Iser
its attempt to explore "nothing," launches itself on a trajectory of selfannihilation, as only the undoing of itself gives "nothing" a chance
are just digits that run against one another, keep endlessly spreading,
and turn the text into a continuous iteration. This digitalization is a far
cry from Malone's activity of canceling his own self-inventions. The
Erasing Narration: Samuel Beckett's Malone Dies and Texts for Nothing
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"nothing" as boundless.
This is the nature of Beckett's art. Dissolving the agent into digits
changing shades. Towards the end, the agent falls silent, and "wonders
what has become of the wish to know, it is gone, the heart is gone, the
head is gone, no one feels anything, asks anything, seeks anything, says
anything, hears anything, there is only silence" (154). The play is ended
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Wolfgang Iser
another hindrance to its emergence, which is the text itself. The text
through textuality, and in order to make itself felt it has to undo the
mediator.
What are the strategies that Beckett brings to bear in order to discredit
the text? The text is littered with denials, negations, retractions, and
cancellations, which are features that we already encountered when
scrutinizing the operations of Malone. What is different here, though,
is the fact that the nuanced forms of denying, negating, and canceling
no longer allow us to spot their underlying intentions. Negations
without positive intentions appear to be the distinctive feature of Texts
for Nothing. This hollowing out of negations deprives them of their
direction, thus leaving a void. In order to render this emptiness tangible,
the frequency of the negations has to be drastically increased, and the
acceleration turns the text into a vortex, sucking up everything that is
said and negated. This makes the text highly unstable, and any attempt
to order it issues in vertigo. Transforming the text into a vertiginous
Malone Dies nothingness kept seeping into the stories by making them
indeterminate, and thus it fulfilled a function. In Texts for Nothing
Erasing Narration: Samuel Beckett's Malone Dies and Texts for Nothing
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This is in line with Beckett's claim, voiced in the letter to Axel Kaun
quoted above that the writer has to "bore holes" into the text in order to
make what is beneath - "be it nothing or something" - "seep" through.
Incidentally, Beckett considered Beethoven's Seventh Symphony
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Wolfgang Iser
trace, yes, like air leaves among the leaves, among the grass, among
the sand, it's with that it would make a life, but soon it will be the end,
it won't be long now, there won't be any life, there won't have been
any life, there will be silence, the air quite still that trembled once an
Erasing Narration: Samuel Beckett's Malone Dies and Texts for Nothing
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pauses. This is a drastic constraint on what the words of the text are
meant to say, so that the texts peter out into murmurs and silences.
they may seem at first glance, since agency, narration, and language
are anterior to endlessness and "nothing," but this anteriority creates
tangible. Hence the former are endowed with a duality that typifies
Works Cited
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-------. 1995. Texts for Nothing. In The Complete Short Prose 19291989. Ed. S. E. Gontarski. New York: Grove Press, pp. 100-154.
Hegel, Georg Friedrich Wilhelm. 1927. System der Philosophie I. Ed.
Hermann Glockner. Stuttgart: Frommann.
Spencer-Brown, G. 1994 [1969]. Laws of Form. Portland, Ore.: Cognizer.