ABSTRACT

The only comprehensive guide to the plays of one of the world's greatest yet most puzzling contemporary dramatists, The Pinter Ethic penetrates the mystery of Harold Pinter's work with compelling and authoritative insights that locate and disclose the primal power of his drama in his characters' powerplay for dominance. With remarkable clarity, Penelope Prentice's close reading of Pinter's work untangles the multiple ambiguities, complex conflicts and contradictory actions which continue to baffle, bewilder, and confound critics and audiences. She reveals that Pinter's plays reflect not a vision of postmodern hopelessness in a world threatening to self-destruct, but provoke unguessed choice and action that enlarge the concept of love and link it to justice. Offering a definitive analysis of Pinter's work--from his early poetry, fiction, interviews, essays and novel The Dwarfs to his most recent play Celebration --Prentice demonstrates why Pinter's work can only be communicated through drama where attitude and intention may count for little, but where action is all.

chapter |6 pages

A Night Out: Vitality Vitiated

chapter |4 pages

The Hothouse: Madness and Violence

chapter |8 pages

The Dwarfs: Dominance as Betrayal

chapter |2 pages

The Servant: Paradigmatic Powerplays

chapter |2 pages

Accident: Death, Desire, and Birth

chapter |2 pages

The Liminal Plays of the Middle Period

chapter |2 pages

The Go-Between: Freedom Reborn

chapter |20 pages

Old Times: Triple Dominance

chapter |18 pages

No Man’s Land: Past Dominance Regained

chapter |18 pages

Betrayal: The Past Regained

chapter |10 pages

Precisely and Family Voices: Lovedeath

chapter |6 pages

A Kind of Alaska: Identity Unresolved

chapter 1|12 pages

One For The Road: The End of the Road