Originally Posted by: earthman buckYikes. I guess the English language is not for me.
It's ok, I've got a whole 8-10 pages to do it in.
This is all I have so far, haha:
In Beckett’s The Unnamable, the figure of “Mahood” conceptualizes an idealized, intellectual approach to the problem of naming that ultimately abuses, falsifies, obscures, and destroys the very language it wishes to perfect. By constantly hounding the narrator with ideas such as fixation of essence, linguistic idealism, and having ones own voice, Mahood allows the text to further explore the binary between labels and things that the first two sections of The Trilogy began developing.