Student Question
I need help with an essay comparing Pinter's plays The Birthday Party and Celebration, focusing on how they reflect their socio-political climates.
I have written a 1000 word essay comparing two of Pinter's plays, the Birthday Party in the late 50s and Celebration staged in 1999. I am trying to relate them to the socio-political climate at the time and the associated comment Pinter is making when he wrote them.
Quick answer:
Pinter's plays reflect the socio-political climates of their times. "The Birthday Party," set in the late 1950s, captures Cold War tensions, reflecting Britain's diminished global status and pervasive menace, with characters isolated and communication ineffective. "Celebration," staged in 1999, mirrors a post-Cold War era where capitalism prevails. Despite a more stable global context, it portrays a persistent sense of threat, with affluent characters hiding unscrupulous behaviors beneath a veneer of respectability.
As you say, the two plays were written at two very different historical moments. The Birthday Party was written in the late 1950s when the Cold War between the Western Bloc and the Soviet Bloc was reaching its peak. The threat of a nuclear war was a concrete danger at the time and Britain also had to cope with the fact that it no longer was the leading international power that it had been before the Second World War. The play reproduces this sense of constant menace as Stanley is persecuted throughout. The Birthday Party also mirrors the feeling of alienation and absurdity that the loss of a central position as world leader entails. The characters that populate the play are isolated from society and their communication is completely uneffective. The audience never has a clear idea about who the characters really are. These were the features that initially made the play a commercial and critical failures but that, with the passing of time, became the marks of Pinter's celebrated style.
First produced in 2000, Celebration was written in a significantly different historical context one that saw the end of the Cold War and the apparent triumph of the Western model of Capitalism. Yet, the play still emanates a sense of menace and the characters in the elegant West End feel just as threatened by their past and by the intrusion of a waiter who could unsettle their celebration. The characters are not the drop-outs of Pinter's first plays but members of the moneyed elite, unscrupulous behind their respectable facades.
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