Özet:
Theatre started to transform from the political aesthetics of the 1970s and the 1980s
to the avant-garde aesthetic of the 1990s. After a long break, since the British theatre
of the 1990s witnessed a new theatre movement, called In-Yer-Face by Alex Sierz,
which critiques traditional British Theatre with its cruel language and challenging
plots. Martin Crimp has produced his most well-known plays in this aesthetic. To
show Crimp’s contribution to the British theatre from a wider perspective, this thesis
explores Crimp’s eight staged plays, Definitely The Bahamas (1987), Dealing with
Clair (1988), The Treatment (1993), Attempts on Her Life (1997), The Country
(2000), Cruel and Tender (2004), Fewer Emergencies (2005), and The City (2008),
basing its discussion on different critical theories, Cultural Materialism, Socialist
Feminism, and Artaud’s theory. For that reason, different criticisms are applied to his
plays in the light of these three theories.
In the Introduction, Crimp’s life and the In-Yer-Face movement will be scrutinized.
In the first chapter, the theories, Cultural Materialism, Socialist Feminism, and
Artaudian Theatre, are explained in a detailed way to correlate between the plays and
the theories. The aim of the second chapter is to find the analogy between Artaud’s
theatre, Crimp’s theatre, and Crimp’s usage of Artaudian cruelty in his contemporary
plays. This is why his three plays, Fewer Emergiencies, Definitely the Bahamas, and
The Country were chosen according to their main theme, cruelty. Drawing on
Cultural Materialism, the third chapter reveals how Crimp reflects the political and
cultural factors of his period into his plays, The City and Dealing with Clair, and how
he approaches these factors in his plays. In the fourth chapter, women characters in
his plays, The Treatment, Attempts on Her Life, and Cruel and Tender, are analyzed
to illustrate how Crimp integrates the perception of women body in the contemporary
world into his plays. In the conclusion part, it is pointed out how Crimp reflects the
cruelness in this world dramatically using stage devices to reach the audiences’
unconscious like Artaud. Secondly, Crimp’s pessimistic attitude towards the power
of ideology and its negative effect on individuals are clarified. The disappearance of
the characters in his plays indicates how individuals are victimized in a system.
Lastly, after examining female characters in his plays, it is found out that his female
characters are imprisoned in the domestic sphere and they fail to struggle with both
capitalism and patriarchy.