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Caretaker By Pinter Essay Research Paper

Caretaker By Pinter Essay, Research Paper


"Drama is not made up of words alone, but sights and sounds, stillness and


motion, noise and silence." While this quotation is relevant to all areas


of drama, it is particularly pertinent in absurdist theatre and is important in


the construction of Harold Pinter’s, The Caretaker. Through these conventions,


sight, sound, stillness, motion, noise and silence, the idea of a random and


lonely world is portrayed. The notion that we are born alone and die alone and


fortuitous, unrelated events happen in between is created by the use of these


techniques throughout the play. The setting is a key aspect in revealing the


ideas from which the play is based. "?a couple of suitcases, a rolled


carpet, a blow-lamp, a wooden chair on it’s side, boxes, a number of ornaments,


a clothes horse, a few short planks of wood, small electrical fire and a very


old electric toaster?" this is an excerpt from the description of the


room in which Aston and Davies live. The room is full of "junk",


unconnected things that have been collected over the years and presently have no


real meaning. This is a comment on life and the experiences a person has, each


experience and memory may seem important at the time, like the gathering


"junk" in Aston’s room may once have, yet after some time they are no


longer significant and become isolated and dimmer. "?a kitchen sink, a


step-ladder, a coal bucket, a lawnmower, a shopping trolley, boxes side board


drawers," the setting also adds to the idea that people are lonely and


isolated beings, each item is completely unrelated to the others, like people


they are a mixture of things, and therefore can be nothing but isolated. The use


of props is essential in adding meaning to the play. "Mick walks to the gas


stove and picks up the Buddha?He hurls the Buddha against the gas stove. It


breaks.(Passionately.)" Buddha is a symbol of calm and serenity, when it is


broken the organisation and order is also broken. The breaking of the Buddha is


a symbol of mans everlasting struggle with the universe, human beings wish to


order and structure everything, while the universe is constantly moving towards


entropy and chaos. This idea is reflected in the play’s outcome, the household


was reasonably calm and ordered until the Buddha was broken and Davies was asked


to leave, a disturbance to the harmony. The utilization of the statue can also


be viewed as comment on human emotions. Throughout the play the characters were


quite detached, both from each other and the outside world, however when Mick


passionately breaks the Buddha (serenity), Davies is requested to leave and the


order that has been displayed throughout the play is lost. The idea being, that


the human emotions work against the human will, the anger exhibited by Mick


disordered a seemingly ordered world. The broken toaster is another fundamental


component of the play. "Aston goes back to his bed and starts to fix the


plug on the toaster." At the very beginning of the play Aston is fixing the


toaster and at the very end, "?takes of his over coat, sits, takes the


screwdriver and pokes the plug,&quo

t; he is still fixing the toaster plug. This


displays the concept that life is meaningless. Nothing was accomplished during


the play. Each character stayed in the same position that they were in to start


with, nothing that they did changed or achieved anything. The sound of the


dripping bucket, which is present throughout the play, helps create meaning.


"A drip sounds in the bucket overhead. They (Mick and Davies) look


up." The dripping sound is a metaphor for all the failings in the world,


those who answer to it fail, those who don’t succeed. Later, "A drip sounds


in the bucket. Davies looks up," Davies who is a homeless tramp, a failure


looks up, Mick, who is a success, keeps his attention trained on Davies. The


dripping sound produced by the leak and the bucket also symbolizes the


ever-present menace in the world. The overhead leak is symbolic of the


unstoppable menace and harm that could strike at random, looming overhead.


Silence and pauses are critical to the play and the ideas underlying the play.


Pauses are used to portray the concept that language is a vague and meaningless


tool people use to hide their own discomfort. The pauses indicate that to fill


the silent gap a person must think about what they are going to say to fill it.


More can be said during the pauses and silences than in the actual dialogue.


"What’s the game? Silence. Well?" Here the silence is used as passive


aggression. Davies does not answer, resisting Mick, as an act of defiance and


thus aggression. The metatext operating in these silences and pause creates the


feeling of unease and tension. These tense pauses and silences are devices used


throughout the play to display the notion of the constant menace that exists in


the world. The pauses also show that while intense thought is still occurring


inside the characters, nothing is being said out loud. This adds to the sense of


isolation, nobody can know what another is thinking during those pauses, so


people are essentially isolated. The lighting used in Aston’s monologue is


significant to the concepts put forth by the play. "During Aston’s speech


the room grows darker. By the close of the speech only Aston can be seen


clearly. Davies and all the other objects are in the shadow. The fade down of


the light must be as gradual, as protracted and as unobtrusive as


possible." Aston goes form standing in a room where the light is everywhere


to standing in the light by himself. The fade down is very gradual and leaves


Aston completely alone. This scene is symbolic of the isolation that people


experience. It is also a comment on how fragile people are, most people do not


start out believe they are alone, but gradually the feel the sense of


loneliness, the unobtrusive departure of safety and the introduction of menace


and isolation. The change from child to adult is alluded to in connection with


this realisation of separation in Aston monologue. Through the application of


sight, sound, stillness, motion, noise and silence, meaning can both create and


aid dialogue in the depiction of meaning. In the absurdist play, The Caretaker,


by Harold Pinter much of the play is constructed through these techniques.

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