118 research outputs found
Samuel Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape: Remembering Kant, Forgetting Proust
This article draws on Samuel Beckett’s recently published letters
and archival scholarship to consider the place of Immanuel Kant’s
critical epistemology within Beckett’s early thinking and his subsequent
works. Beginning from Beckett’s engagement with Kant’s Critique
of Pure Reason, demonstrated by notes taken from Wilhelm
Windelband’s A History of Philosophy between 1932 and 1933, excerpts
from Jules de Gaultier’s From Kant to Nietzsche in the
“Whoroscope” Notebook, and Beckett’s acquisition of Immanuel
Kants Werke in 1938, I offer a close analysis of the philosophical underpinnings
of Beckett’s parody of Proust’s À la recherche du temps
perdu in Krapp’s Last Tape. The larger purpose of this article is to
argue that a critique of metaphysical thought can be found in Beckett’s
work and to demonstrate that Kant’s influence as a philosophical
source of this critique has been largely overlooked in Beckett criticism
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A text become provisional: revisiting the capital of the ruins
This essay is a reexamination of Samuel Beckett's The Capital of the Ruins, the untransmitted radio script written for Raidió Éireann (now Raidió Teilifís Éireann) in 1946 following his work with the Irish Red Cross in Saint Lô. The first half of this essay is concerned with the archival and publishing history of the text. This section examines the variants introduced by various editors or publishers and makes a case for a definitive edition of the text based on the edited photocopy of the typescript held in the Beckett International Foundation archive at the University of Reading. The second half of this essay then uses this close attention to the text to reconsider the focus of The Capital of the Ruins and the extent to which the piece is more firmly directed towards socio-political aspects of post-neutrality Ireland than has previously been identified
Dupuytren’s Interventions Surgery versus Collagenase (DISC) Trial : Study Protocol for a pragmatic, two arm parallel group, non-inferiority randomised controlled trial
Background: Dupuytren’s contracture is a fibro-proliferative disease of the hands affecting over 2 million UK adults, particularly the white, male population. Surgery is the traditional treatment, however recent studies have indicated that an alternative to surgery - Collagenase Clostridium Histolyticum (Collagenase) - is better than placebo in the treatment of Dupuytren’s contracture. There is however no robust randomised controlled trial that provides a definitive answer on the clinical effectiveness of Collagenase compared with limited fasciectomy surgery. The Dupuytren’s Interventions Surgery vs Collagenase Trial (DISC) Trial was therefore designed to fill this evidence gap. Methods/Design: The DISC Trial is a multi-centre pragmatic two arm parallel group, randomised controlled trial. Participants will be assigned 1:1 to receive either Collagenase injection or surgery (limited fasciectomy). We aim to recruit 710 adult participants with Dupuytren’s contracture. Potential participants will be identified in primary and secondary care, screened by a delegated clinician and if eligible and consenting, baseline data will be collected and randomisation completed. The primary outcome will be the self-reported Patient Evaluation Measure assessed at 1 year after treatment. Secondary outcome measures include the Unité Rhumatologique des Affections de la Main Scale, the Michigan Hand Questionnaire, EQ-5D-5L, resource use, further procedures, complications, recurrence, total active movement and extension deficit, and time to return to function. Given the limited evidence comparing recurrence rates following Collagenase injection and limited fasciectomy, and the importance of a return to function as soon as possible for patients, the associated measures for each will be prioritised to allow treatment effectiveness in the context of these key elements to be assessed. An economic evaluation will assess the cost effectiveness of treatments and a qualitative sub-study will assess participants experiences and preferences of the treatments. Discussion: The DISC trial is the first randomised controlled trial, to our knowledge, to investigate the clinical and cost effectiveness of Collagenase compared to limited fasciectomy surgery for patients with Dupuytren’s contracture. ISRCTN registry identifier: ISRCTN18254597. Prospectively registered on 11th April 2017. https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN18254597 Keywords: Dupuytren’s contracture, Collagenase clostridium histolyticum, limited fasciectomy, surgery, correction, randomised controlled tria
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