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12 - Pinter’s sexual politics

from Part 3 - Reactions to Pinter

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2006

Peter Raby
Affiliation:
Homerton College, Cambridge
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Summary

Introduction: delimiting ‘the political’

Pinter's theatre is a theatre of images involving domestic violence, territorial struggles and linguistic conflict. As the conflictual range of responses indicates, the dramatic syntax of these images remains paratactic, both generically and linguistically, difficult to articulate as tragicomedy or through the existing grammar of social relations. Events and relationships are framed within socially intelligible and dramatically 'powerful' situations in ways which resist the dramatic conventions of naturalism or realism. The tension between rhetoric and grammar enables a figurative diversity of conversation which has come to seem recognisably 'Pinteresque', a comically pregnant moment of conversation which dwells in a menacingly tragic absence of social recognition. The enigmatic particularity of dramatic images is both a principle of dramatic construction in Pinter’s work and a key dynamic in performance. Precise theatrical presentation makes it difficult to describe or narrate the suggestive power of these images in non-dramatic or nontheatrical terms. As Pinter himself put it: ‘To supply an explicit moral tag to an evolving and compulsive dramatic image seems to me facile, impertinent and dishonest.’ To interpret his plays symbolically or allegorically also does violence to Pinter’s precise art. But to the extent that his images generate metaphors of more general concerns, they need to be considered as sociopolitical representations of power.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2001

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