To Make the World in the Maelstrom of its Undoing

Cormac McCarthy’s “The Stonemason”

Authors

  • Federico Bellini

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.13135/1592-4467/8523

Keywords:

Cormac McCarthy, The Stonemason, play

Abstract

Possibly due to the fact that it has never been produced in its entirety, Cormac McCarthy’s play The Stonemason has thus far received only scant attention by critics. However, an analysis of this text, supported by the manuscripts held at the Wittliff Collections, proves highly rewarding for an understanding of the author’s poetics. The article discusses the intrinsic limits of the play in light of the history of its reception and of its failed productions as well as McCarthy’s misattribution of a quote from Jean-Baptiste Le Rond D’Alembert to Carl Friedrich Gauss in the first stage direction. It also analyzes the play following McCarthy’s own suggestion – recorded in his correspondence with Emily Mann – that the piece was intended to be “a simple, classical story about a hero and his mentor, how the hero loses his way, and how he recovers it.” In doing this, it relies on the several intertextual references in the play. Finally, it considers McCarthy’s decision to publish the work in spite of its limitations as a meta-poetic statement about his authorial ethics.

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Published

2019-09-01