Spatial Psychology/ Psychological space: Psychological impact of space in the Creation of Semantic ‘Uncertainty’ in Pinter’s Early Plays
Abstract
The major motif in Pinter's drama is the desire for
power, coupled with the achievement of domi nance. Pinter attacks the policies of oppressive re gimes practicing violence and torture, and his po litical dramas concentrate on the struggle be tween the individual and the authoritative power.
Pinter's The Birthday Party (1957) examines the
significance of power and identity in spaces of self
and power relations. In One for the Road (1980)
and Mountain Language (1988), Pinter deals with
incarceration and torture, using the theatrical
space of prison to highlight and examine the nar ratives of authoritative control and violation of
human rights. Space as a motif in Pinter's plays,
serves as a site for discourse and aims to mark the
interaction between power and identity. In this
paper, I will attempt to examine how Pinter uses
the idea of space and to what extent space can be
read and decoded as a site for struggle for power
and identity. My aim is to show that how an ordi nary physical space of a room become a site for
recreation of new spaces for exercise of power and
maintaining identity. However, I aim to delve into
these spaces of conflict, exploitation and subjuga tion showing the significance of power and iden tity. This paper, therefore, concludes that Pinter's
theatre of power constitutes a polyphony of polit ical rhetoric within the spaces, all competing for
approval or control.
URI
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