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  1. Há 4 dias · Early Career Scholars Seminar on Publishing. The Samuel Beckett Early Career Scholars Initiative has announced details of its latest online seminar. Titled ‘Try again. Fail again. Fail Better: Success in Publishing’, the session will share ideas on all aspects of getting published in the discipline.

  2. Há 5 dias · Samuel Beckett once wrote: “Ever tried? Ever failed? No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better”. I used to be terrified of failure. Years ago, I wrote in my first novel that it was easier to roll up and play hedgehog rather than face what you fear. I think that line birthed from receiving another rejection for that work.

  3. Há 3 dias · Try Again. Fail again. Fail better. – Samuel Beckett#MotivationMonday, #Inspiration, #SuccessMindset, #AttitudeIsEverything, #DreamBig, #PositiveVibesOnly, #...

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  4. Há 11 horas · This persistence is perhaps captured most succinctly in the final three thoughts of Samuel Beckett’s well-known unnamable character: “[Y]ou must go on, I can’t go on, I’ll go on.” Footnote 39 Neoliberal teaching dread leaves committed academics repeating something very similar to themselves—though now with a specific object in mind: teaching— let it be your dread.

  5. Há 2 dias · Prévia do material em texto. 91 ARS ano 14 n. 27 * Universidade Federal de São Paulo [UNIFESP]. Samuel Beckett, Quad,1981. O artigo formula algumas hipóteses para a análise da obra tardia de Samuel Beckett, particularmente as peças para televisão, produzidas pela Süddeutscher Rundfunk – SDR (hoje: Südwestrundfunk – SWR), sob direção do autor, entre 1966 e 1986: Eh Joe ...

  6. Há 5 dias · The writer Samuel Beckett once said: "fail again, fail better". But it now seems that we should be saying: "fail again, fail smarter". Failure is an inevitable part of life, but by...

  7. Há 3 dias · Thus, drawing on the Theatre of the Absurd, particularly The Birthday Party by Harold Pinter, Ping Pong by Arthur Adamov, The Chairs by Eugène Ionesco, and Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett, we illustrate how an atmospheric backdrop of menace, expressed through parody and aphasia, permeates consumer culture as an ontological meaninglessness which often leaves the consumer frustrated .