1st Edition

Psychoanalysing Mind-Body Narratives through Beckett and Artaud The Trauma of the Body

By Sarah Meehan O'Callaghan Copyright 2027
194 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

194 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

194 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book provides an epistemology of the body as it relates to subjectivity through an analysis of selected works of Antonin Artaud and Samuel Beckett. Presented in three parts, the book explores a fundamental premise: that there is a traumatic and alienating dimension to embodiment that resists expression within representational systems and is core to the being of any subject. In Part One,... Read more

Introduction: On Not Knowing the Body

Part One - The Epistemology of the Body

Chapter 1. The Question of the Body

Chapter 2. The Problem with Mind-Body Narratives

Chapter 3. The Trauma of the Body: A Fissure in Being

Part Two - The Body of Drama

Chapter 4. The Aesthetic of Debility in Beckett's Theatre

Chapter 5. “Something is Taking its Course”: Endgame's Chronic Bodies

Chapter 6. Artaud’s Impossible Body: Cruelty, Pain and Affect

Chapter 7. Theatre of Excess: Modes of Jouissance in Artaud’s The Cenci

Part Three - The Body Between Being and Non-Being

Chapter 8. Not I: Demlimiting the Void of Being

Chapter 9. After Artaud: The Body as the Question of Being

Conclusion: The Enigma of the Body and the Truth of Being

Biography

Sarah Meehan O’Callaghan is an independent scholar, editor and writer. She has published numerous articles and book chapters in the field of Lacanian psychoanalysis, covering topics such as sexuality, disability, ethics and the body. She is the founder of Visionediting, a business devoted to editing and writing. 

“The body has a privileged status in contemporary thinking, but it typically marks the point at which thinking stops and brute material reality is asserted. Sarah Meehan O’Callaghan’s stunning Psychoanalyzing Mind-Body Narratives Through Beckett and Artaud marks a radical break from this unfortunate tendency. Through the narratives of Beckett and Artaud, O’Callaghan finds how the body appears not as a limit that thought cannot surpass but as a point of impossibility within thought. Through her approach, she discovers a compelling new way of conceiving the mind-body problem, as this relationship becomes the expression of subjectivity itself. A revolutionary work for a world in which we are losing touch with the body as its priority becomes more vehemently asserted.” - Professor Todd McGowan, University of Vermont, USA

“While providing original and insightful analyses of key Beckett and Artaud theatre works, this book makes a vital contribution to the intersection of psychoanalysis and embodiment studies. It draws on the Lacanian Real to argue that that the body is fundamentally unknowable, but that cultural narratives or visual fantasies of the ideal, able and productive body seek to elide this foundational gap in our knowledge and the trauma it produces. Sarah Meehan O'Callaghan argues that, in very different ways, the theatre of these two playwrights, in theory as well as practice in Artaud’s case, work on the spectator to dismantle the normative perceptual, linguistic and representational structures that conceal the ontological trauma of embodiment. This trauma is part of the human condition of both having and being a body but is most acutely experienced by those who are marginalised through illness, age or disability. Through her readings of Beckett and Artaud’s theatre, the author powerfully challenges those narratives and images of normative embodiment in culture, aesthetics and psychoanalysis. Beautifully written, this is a carefully argued and accessible account of the relevance of Lacanian theory to the fact that ‘when it comes to our relation to the body, we are not masters in our own homes’.” - Professor Anna McMullan, Professor in Theatre and Director of Research for Film, Theatre & Television, University of Reading, UK

“Artaud’s madhouse insight of a possibly impossible ‘body without organs’ has spun remarkably diverse takes and controversies – O’Callaghan uses it in part here to re-ground and re-think the vagaries of the body. O’Callaghan creates a teeming, empirically rich discussion around psychoanalysis, debility, anguish, Beckett’s 'chronic bodies' among other critical topics, extending the discussion of already fertile fields.” - Jay Murphy, author of New Media and the Artaud Effect and Artaud’s Metamorphosis