In Harold Pinter’s dramatic oeuvre, there exists a primal drive for possession operating the actions of the characters, which Robert Gordon in Harold Pinter: The Theatre of Power calls ‘the territorial imperative’. Consequently, the space occupied by them, symbolized by the central metaphor of the ‘room’, becomes a significant motif in many of his works, highlighting the psychological reality of the characters. Thus, it is not simply the space they inhabit but also their inner space that they carry within is Pinter’s concern. This paper aims at an exploration of this inner mindscape of Stanley in The Birthday Party (1957) with the objective to contend that the hidden fears, the repressed desires, and the unconscious wishes that lurk within play a dominant role in his struggle for the construction of his identity. However, in this strife, he undergoes an inevitable psychological paralysis as he ultimately regresses into infantile helplessness. Therefore, the study shall probe into the inner intricacies and emotional vulnerability of Stanley through the Freudian lens of psychosexuality, and the inter-relationship between masculinity and power. The relevance of this essay lies in contending that even men undergo emotional collapse and suffer from intra-psychic crisis.
Alankar Das Dalal (Wed,) studied this question.