The Caretaker Mirror the Contemporary Society
The Caretaker appears to be a critique of society not in a broad sense but in its
limited aspects. That is a number of aspects of society appear to come under
criticism in the play. In their different ways both Davies and Aston are
victims of society. Davies cannot cope with its complexity and Aston has a
damaged mentality but society makes no attempt to help them. Davies seems to be
doomed to perpetual loneliness, while Aston, also lonely relies on the
unpredictable companionship of his brother. Both the characters lack fulfillment.
Davies
is a man rejected by society because he does not have his ‘paper’ without the
documentary evidence by which society labels and categories its members, he is
a lost case. The individual is not recognized by society. It recognizes only a
name and number on a piece of paper and without these papers the individual
does not exist. So Davies is condemned to wander rootless and unwanted,
terrified by vague fears of persecution. He does not know the technical terms
mentioned by Mick, the references to house owning and purchase, insurance and
banking, bonus schemes, etc but society gives importance to the knowledge of
such things, possessed by its members. Thus without papers, Davies is a man
without identity.
Aston
is also a victim of society, but his case is different. His operation may be
interpreted as society’s retribution and a symbol of the fear in which it holds
the person who is a potential threat to it. Any such threat must be cruelly and
immediately destroyed, in this case by taking away Aston’s ability to think.
Racial
prejudice is also criticized in The Caretaker through the character of Davies,
and is revealed as the greatest of follies. Davies’s hatred of colored people
is simply a cover for his own deficiencies, and his fear of them is irrational.
Racial prejudice allows Davies to blame others for what is actually his own
fault.
Further
Mick’s dream of a ‘penthouse’ flat is also an implied criticism of society.
Mick’s greatest aim in life seems to be to bring the house up to the standards
that modern society finds desirable. His plan of the decoration of the house
will change its appearance but its basic structure will remain the same as will
the people inside it. What Mick wants is to coat the surface of the house, but
go no deeper. Such an aim is made to appear trivial, false value in a society.
To
sum up, The Caretaker is not wholly a social criticism. Of course, it has an
element of social criticism in it, but this is overshadowed by other themes
such as loneliness, isolation, communication, identity, dreams and illusions,
etc.
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