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The Room Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Bernard F. Dukore

This literature criticism consists of approximately 10 pages of analysis & critique of The Room.
This section contains 2,769 words
(approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Pinter, Harold 1930– - Critical Essay by Bernard F. Dukore

Critical Essay by Bernard F. Dukore

Frequently Pinter's plays begin comically but turn to physical, psychological, or potential violence—sometimes, in varying sequences, to all three. Terror inheres in a statement in The Room that the onstage room, which is occupied, is to let. Although the play turns comic again, it ends on a note of physical violence.

In the early plays menace lurks outside, but it also has psychological roots. The titular room—in which the heroine lives, fearful of an outside force she does not specify—is dark. In The Birthday Party the sheltered young man fears visitors. In The Dumb Waiter outside forces menace a questioning killer. In A Slight Ache a psychologically disturbed man fears a man he invites inside. While menace may take the shape of particular characters, it is usually unspecified or unexplained—therefore, more ominous.

Partly because realistic explanations are absent, disturbing questions arise. One is unsure why characters visit others, why they...
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This section contains 2,769 words
(approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Pinter, Harold 1930– - Critical Essay by Bernard F. Dukore
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Pinter, Harold 1930– - Critical Essay by Bernard F. Dukore from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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