repertoire

12/04/2025

Yoanna Yaneva

THE REPERTOIRE AS A KIND OF REPETITION: AUTOCITATIVITY AND MEMORY IN “Waiting for Godot” BY S. BECKETT

  • ABSTRACT

    The article examines Samuel Beckett’s absurdist drama “Waiting for Godot” through the lens of autocitation, repetition, and shifting context. Drawing on Jacques Derrida’s notions of the instability of meaning and context, as well as Radosvet Kolarov’s concept the analysis emphasizes the absence of internal memory within the fictional text itself. The first and second acts are approached as autonomous yet mutually reflective textual units, connected not through logical continuity but through rhythmic repetition with variation. This structural pattern evokes a sense of circularity and stasis. The transformations observed in the characters of Pozzo and Lucky are interpreted as metatextual gestures that undermine the linear progression of events. Meanwhile, through the erasure of memory and the constant recurrence of identical actions, Vladimir and Estragon appear trapped within the closed boundaries of a chronotope of waiting. In this way, the play presents memory not as a source of meaning, but as a mechanism of deferral.