Perhaps if it were a hybrid material, say, a type of plastic or metal latticed within the ceramic material, like rebar in concrete...
Much research has been done in this area, and the rebar analogy is good but not quite accurate.
Rebar is used in concrete because while very strong in compression, concrete has poor tensile strength. The rebar is used to take the tensile loads, not necessarily to stop cracks from forming and propagating.
Most research in high-temp brittle ceramics has been to increase the toughness (resistance to crack growth). The best reinforcements are not long continuous "fibers" like rebar in concrete, but small whiskers. Additionally, you want to design the fiber/matrix interface to slip. It is this microfiber pullout that dissipates energy and blunts cracks. It's called "crack bridging" in the literature.
DM pauses, realizing he is even boring himself.....
Sorry folks...
Hmmmm.... "Report to Moderator" link...
I should report myself. I suk. Lame-ass posting...
I wonder what happens? Will I get a electrical keyboard shock? I ban myself? Kewl!