Nihilism in Samuel Beckett's The Lost Ones: A Tale for Holocaust Remembrance

Philosophy and Literature 39 (1A):212-233 (2015)
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Abstract

In 1966, Samuel Beckett wrote, and then abandoned, a short story to which he eventually gave the title Le dépeupleur. In 1970, he completed it to his satisfaction and it was published.1 Two years later, it was issued in an English translation prepared by Beckett himself, who gave it the very different title The Lost Ones. In this story, Beckett is, like Dante, inventing narrative images of a “realm” or “world” in which matters of the utmost existential and moral gravity are at stake.Beckett is frequently interpreted as an existential nihilist—that is to say, someone who, in Nietzsche’s definition, would claim that, with the “death of God,” our moral ideals and values are without any grounding in an ultimate and..

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