Abstract

The paper at hand attempts to interpret a contemporary British playwright’s theatrical artistic attempt to present a disturbing social issue and to suggest possible modes of help. In [BLANK], Alice Birch confronts the audience with the ugly cycle of women’s criminal conducts, female criminals’ offending and reoffending. The playwright employs the theater of the absurd as a theatrical medium through which she portrays the absurd reality of these female criminals and their families. To confront and shock the audience with the ugliness of these charterers’ reality, Birch uses In-Yer-Face theater. Birch suggests that the female criminal characters are victims who need proper psychological and medical rehabilitation services to break the ugly cycle of reoffending. The playwright implies a very challenging question for the audience: is it possible to break some patterns of some biological genetic behaviors? That is, can female criminals, in [BLANK], break away from their criminal behaviors that are biologically innate through the help of medicine and psychology not just through some practices of traditional stigmatizing forms of discipline and punishment in the justice system that are often proven to be unreliable means of constraint? By shocking and confronting society with the ugly reality of many female prisoners, in [BLANK], Birch is trying to give these pathetic female characters’ voices, mirrors, selves, forcing society to acknowledge them as human beings who have an essential role in society.

Highlights

  • In [BLANK], written in 2019, Alice Birch presents a universal serious social issue that disturbs most societies: women’s criminal conducts

  • It is essential to analyze Birch’s implication of the effects of some biochemical factors, mainly the association between serotonin levels and criminology, which can help societies deal with criminal behaviors when those factors are scientifically identified and psychologically and medically treated

  • In PIZZA, A’s sister has been beaten up by her boyfriend: “He has pinned her up against the wall . . . he’d pushed her face into her own vomit . . . he’s kicked a baby out of her” (Birch, 2017, p. 55). Violent reality for these female prisoners on stage and the minimum difference offered by the people in charge, Birch is holding a mirror to society itself and emphasizing its responsibility to make a difference for these desperate women by thinking of possible ways to raise awareness of the possible biochemical role, which might make a difference

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

In [BLANK], written in 2019, Alice Birch presents a universal serious social issue that disturbs most societies: women’s criminal conducts. In [BLANK], Birch suggests the female criminal characters—mothers, wives, and daughters—are victims who need proper psychological and medical rehabilitation services to break the ugly cycle of reoffending. Can the female criminals in [BLANK] break away from their criminal behaviors that are biologically innate through the help of medicine and psychology and not just through traditional stigmatizing forms of discipline and punishment in the justice system that are often proven to be unreliable means of constraint?. It is essential to analyze Birch’s implication of the effects of some biochemical factors, mainly the association between serotonin levels and criminology, which can help societies deal with criminal behaviors when those factors are scientifically identified and psychologically and medically treated

DISCUSSION AND ANALAYSIS
CONCLUSION

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