1st Edition

Cluttered Universes of Samuel Beckett and Tadeusz Kantor

By Michał Kisiel Copyright 2026
174 Pages
by Routledge

174 Pages
by Routledge

Cluttered Universes of Samuel Beckett and Tadeusz Kantor is a collection of four essays bringing Kantor’s and Beckett’s texts, theatres, and theories into conversation with deconstruction, new materialism, environmental humanities, and posthumanism. This book is dedicated to two artists rarely discussed together to see how their awareness of poetics and performativity of matter might help us... Read more

Acknowledgements

 

INTRODUCTION

The Fear of Meaning Something

Cluttered Universes

Bringing Matter Back to Life

The Two Ends of the World

Putting the Void to Work

From Difference to Diffraction

Bibliography

CHAPTER 1. Diffraction of I: Diffractive Memories and Kantor’s Theatre of Death

Exit History

Dark Crammed Holes

Diffraction and Repetition

Photographic Apparatuses

Diffraction of I

Bibliography

CHAPTER 2. “Unspeakable Homes”: Uninhabitable Spaces and the Ruins of the Everyday World

I Am Not I, Therefore I Am (at Home)

The Parrot and the Grave

Dusty Archives

Elevating the Rags

Neither

Bibliography

CHAPTER 3. Resilient Survivors: Insects, Mannequins, and the Death of the Nonhuman

Nonhuman Noises, Excessive Images

Heretic Machines

Dying Is Never Death

The Logic of the Swarm  

Coda: Insect Technologies

Bibliography      

CHAPTER 4. Elsewhere but Here: Beckett’s Exhausted Ecologies and Liminal Intimacies

A Tree with Too Many Leaves     

The Ecopoetics of Exhaustion     

Thus Flesh and Bone Subsist       

Intimacy Is Persistence   

Global Failures

Bibliography      

CONCLUSIONS

Index

Biography

Michał Kisiel is a literary scholar, translator, editor, and assistant professor at Jan Dlugosz University in Czestochowa, Poland. In 2019, he received his PhD in literary studies. He has published in Journal of Beckett Studies, Samuel Beckett Today/Aujourd’hui, ER(R)GO, Zoophilologica, and Review of International American Studies, among other places. He is an editorial team member of ER(R)GO: Theory – Literature – Culture and a member of the Polish Academy of Sciences Commission on Literary History (Katowice Branch). His academic interests include experimental literature, deconstruction, materialist theories of the nonhuman, contemporary poetry, theatre and drama, and environmental humanities.

Kisiel’s comparative study, or as he phrases it, “possible trajectories,” is long overdue and especially useful given Beckett’s popularity and performance frequency in Poland--as far back as 1957 at Teatr Współczesny in Warsaw, directed by Jerzy Kreczmar during the Soviet occupation.  Kisiel then offers an “original perspective” to the subject from a bilingual author well positioned to analyse both major authors and theatrical innovators, especially examining what Kisiel calls Beckett and Kantor’s “cluttered universe” and more, the “need for literary and environmental cartographies in the Anthropocene.”  His theoretical perspective is quite “leading edge,” for instance: “The overall theoretical corpus is based on the developments in new materialism with regard to its deconstructive and Deleuzian roots.”  This study resonates well beyond what might be considered the narrow confines of Polish theatre.

--S. E. GontarskiRobert O. Lawton University Distinguished Professor, Florida State University, USA

Cluttered Universes of Samuel Beckett and Tadeusz Kantor is an engaging and thought-provoking book. Kisiel guides the reader deftly through the complexities of new materialist debates, focusing on materiality, embodiment, and the nonhuman before using this lens to examine the works of Samuel Beckett and Tadeusz Kantor. The result is a compelling and theoretically rich contribution to both Beckett and Kantor studies, but also to the broader fields of new materialism and Anthropocene scholarship. Kisiel’s readings of embodiment, temporality, and nonhuman agency in Beckett and Kantor are nuanced, creative and intellectually rigorous. His framing of “cluttering” as both an aesthetic and conceptual force – aligned with Karen Barad’s and Timothy Morton’s ideas of coexistence, diffraction, and weird intimacy – interweaves materialist thought with artistic practice. By affirming fragility and imperfection, Kisiel unveils how Beckett and Kantor dismantle the subject/object binary and offer new ways to engage with the nonhuman. Despite their androcentric limitations, their works reveal vibrant material agencies and temporal disruptions that prefigure ecological and epistemological shifts. Ultimately, Kisiel suggests that it is only by embracing failure, vulnerability, and openness to the nonhuman, that can we reimagine our place in a shared, entangled world – one shaped not by mastery, but by relationality and transformation. Cluttered Universes is a timely study that addresses contemporary ecological concerns and post-anthropocentric theory while casting fresh light on the work of two great twentieth-century authors.

Clare WallaceAssociate Professor of English and American Literatures, Charles University, Czech Republic