Drama and the Postmodern: Assessing the Limits of Metatheatre
Powered By Xquantum

Drama and the Postmodern: Assessing the Limits of Metatheatre By ...

Read
image Next

This is a limited free preview of this book. Please buy full access.


appears most comfortable with the political implications of his work. Thus, while the play is cognizant of the various and sundry stereotypes which now populate British culture, “his male characters struggle in their inability to fulfill the stereotypical societal roles expected of men.’’ It would seem, then, that even given Penhall’s approach to the various themes of postmodernity (i.e., in toying with how types never fit their apparently representative models), he is well prepared to pursue political truths in a way that marks him as having moved beyond the postmodern. However, when placed alongside his pears, it is also clear just how tenuous this positioning is and how likely it is he might yet tip toward a more postmodern perspective in the future.

Margaret F. Savilonis’ essay on Kirk Lynn’s WAR provides a final and recent example of this tension between fulfilling a progressive politics and recognizing how postmodern attitudes toward truth refuse the very concept of progress, while yet committing to the idea that the solution to this dilemma resides, once again, in local and individual responses to larger social issues:

The desire to present multiple solutions, to offer limitless possibilities, generates action. The intervention to save Sister broadens out conceptually as Mother, Waitress, Boss, and Secretariat devote their energy to presenting their solutions for fixing the world while One Man and One Guy dedicate themselves to saving Sister. Fixing the world happens incrementally; not everything can be fixed at once, but by taking the initiative to change even just one small thing, even at the most personal level, each individual makes a significant contribution. (343 in this volume)

Savolinis’ essay, moreover, is notable for how it tracks the way in which this tension can be examined performatively as well as both narratively and textually:

Sister’s “escape” at the play’s end depends on not only the other characters in the world of the play, but also on the audience, as indicated by Secretariat’s closing speech, in which she proposes that the audience will likely need to help her fix whatever is