First used by the theatre critic Irving Wardle in a 1958 article, the expression comedy of menace has become a catch-all phrase systematically applied to Harold Pinter’s plays. Yet Wardle has offered a specific thematic and aesthetic definition of the genre based on the motif of the malevolent intrusion as well as on the paradoxical combination of comedy and menace. This paper will focus on the aesthetic definition of the genre, more precisely on the simultaneousness of nonsense and menace in The Birthday Party and of farce and menace in The Dumb Waiter. In these two plays, Pinter makes extensive use of nonsense and slapstick yet always endowing these comic devices with a sense of menace. Goldberg, McCann and Ben are indeed both clowns and ...
Readers who approach the Theater of the Absurd face complex interpretive problems. The style of Haro...
22 p. -- Bibliogr.: p. 21-22Harold Pinter’s 'The Birthday Party' and 'The Room' have very frequently...
Readers who approach the Theater of the Absurd face complex interpretive problems. The style of Har...
Utilisée pour la première fois par le critique de théâtre Irving Wardle dans un article publié en 19...
Harold Pinter’s play The Dumb Waiter is commonly known as a comedy of menace. It stands out as a pla...
This article introduces Pinter as an early practitioner of the Theater of the Absurd as well as an e...
The particular characteristics of Pinter’s theatre such as the theme of violence, the competitive in...
Harold Pinter, the Nobel laureate, is a literary giant of modern drama in English. His plays are cat...
Harold Pinter is the recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature in the year 2004 for his contributi...
AbstractCharacters in Harold Pinter's plays are always on alert against any kind of physical or psyc...
Abstract: This paper is a study on the absurdity underneath the realistic factors in Harold Pinter’...
The British playwright Harold Pinter (1930-2008) is undoubtedly one of the greatest and most extraor...
As delineated in the Introduction, the central direction of this thesis is that of determining the ...
In Harold Pinter's last completed project before his death, a screen adaptation of Anthony Shaffer's...
As a result of its close ties with theatre, drama has often been associated with sight and this has,...
Readers who approach the Theater of the Absurd face complex interpretive problems. The style of Haro...
22 p. -- Bibliogr.: p. 21-22Harold Pinter’s 'The Birthday Party' and 'The Room' have very frequently...
Readers who approach the Theater of the Absurd face complex interpretive problems. The style of Har...
Utilisée pour la première fois par le critique de théâtre Irving Wardle dans un article publié en 19...
Harold Pinter’s play The Dumb Waiter is commonly known as a comedy of menace. It stands out as a pla...
This article introduces Pinter as an early practitioner of the Theater of the Absurd as well as an e...
The particular characteristics of Pinter’s theatre such as the theme of violence, the competitive in...
Harold Pinter, the Nobel laureate, is a literary giant of modern drama in English. His plays are cat...
Harold Pinter is the recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature in the year 2004 for his contributi...
AbstractCharacters in Harold Pinter's plays are always on alert against any kind of physical or psyc...
Abstract: This paper is a study on the absurdity underneath the realistic factors in Harold Pinter’...
The British playwright Harold Pinter (1930-2008) is undoubtedly one of the greatest and most extraor...
As delineated in the Introduction, the central direction of this thesis is that of determining the ...
In Harold Pinter's last completed project before his death, a screen adaptation of Anthony Shaffer's...
As a result of its close ties with theatre, drama has often been associated with sight and this has,...
Readers who approach the Theater of the Absurd face complex interpretive problems. The style of Haro...
22 p. -- Bibliogr.: p. 21-22Harold Pinter’s 'The Birthday Party' and 'The Room' have very frequently...
Readers who approach the Theater of the Absurd face complex interpretive problems. The style of Har...