Recommend Documents. The absurd of existence in Harold Pinter’s “The Birthday Party”Full description. • The Room and the Dumb Waiter.
I don't know quite what to say about this play--it was my first Pinter experience, and I'd be interested to read more. But I'd say that I got a lot more through discussing the play in class than in the actual reading of it; which doesn't necessarily discount it, but I'm hesitant to say I loved it, when really I loved the issues that arose peripherally, as my class was perplexed as to what to bring up from within the text.
Issues like: where do we search for meaning, particularly in our reading of literature--is it on the surface? What is the importance of a text if you have to read between the lines, so to speak, in order to gain anything from it. Several people waxed poetic on 'art for art's sake' and claim that we should never make conjectures about a text--any assumptions must be made from the actual evidence in the work itself--and continued by asking why we can't just enjoy what's there, rather than analyzing everything to death?
I think that strain of thought is idiotic, and it made me wonder why these people are English majors, if they don't like analyzing literature in an exhaustive fashion! Pinter's play, though, creates a taut atmosphere--spatially, it is claustrophobic, and each movement deliberate, leading us to wonder as readers when the tightrope is going to snap. Similarly, the dialogue never falls on anything substantial, as though Gus and Ben are circling the issues at hand. That in itself is fascinating (and why we discussed the implications of 'reading between the lines' in a text). The dumb waiter itself points to, I think, humanity's fascination or need to look to and obey some higher authority--Ben, in this way, is incredibly robotic. He doesn't know what the dumb waiter is, this scares him, and then he wants to follow it simply because it seems authoritative. Gus asks questions, and is perhaps punished for doing so--certainly he isn't encouraged.
Very Orwellian or Atwood-esque in the sense that they warn readers that it's when you stop asking questions that 'those who are they' (haha) get you, so to speak. But it's also Gus, asking questions here, who is going to pay for doing so. An interesting play in terms of looking at power politics--Gus obeys Ben, at least provisionally, and Ben in turn yields to disembodied images of power. Communication in such heirarchic situations, then, seems impossible in Pinter's view (or at least in mine). It's also difficult to judge a play without seeing it performed, I must admit. Some things came across better when we did some reading-aloud in class--some of the intricacies made more sense or were highlighted a bit brighter. It's an interesting play, but not necessarily the easiest one to enter into.
Requires multiple readings, though as it takes only 30-40 minutes to get through it, it's not too unreasonable. Disclosure: This piece of Absurd Theater was an Integral piece in the Curriculum of the University, It was under the Subject of the Theater of Absurd, I own a Paperback of it with the Features above.
The Dumb Waiter Written by Characters Ben Gus Date premiered 21 January 1960 Place premiered Original language English Genre Setting A basement room The Dumb Waiter is a one-act play by written in 1957. 'Small but perfectly formed, The Dumb Waiter might be considered the best of Harold Pinter's early plays, more consistent than and sharper than.
It combines the classic characteristics of early Pinter – a paucity of information and an atmosphere of menace, working-class small-talk in a claustrophobic setting – with an oblique but palpable political edge and, in so doing, can be seen as containing the germ of Pinter's entire dramatic oeuvre'. ' The Dumb Waiter is Pinter distilled – the very essence of a writer who tapped into our desire to seek out meaning, confront injustice and assert our individuality.' • Derbyshire, Harry. 'Harold Pinter's The Dumb Waiter (review)', Modern Drama, vol 53, no 2 (2010), pp266-268. • ^ Glover, Jamie.
'The Dumb Waiter' (programme notes). The Print Room, 2013. • ^ Billington, Michael. Harold Pinter.
Faber & Faber, 2nd edition, 2007, p89 et seq. • ^ Cohn, Ruby. 'The World of Harold Pinter', Tulaine Drama Review, 6 (March 1962), pp55-7.
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