ijier logo

Lust and Loss in Ravenhill’s Shopping and F****ing & Kane’s Blasted: Troubling Trends in a New Culture

Keywords:
Array
Abstract

As the modern world hangs on a string of utter moral collapse, several writers unleash moral restraints, thus bringing immorality to the market square to consumers who seem to yearn for the collapse of moral walls in their world. Hearkening to such cravings, Mark Ravenhill’s provocative title and play, Shopping and Fucking (1996), and Sarah Kane’s flaming play, Blasted (1995), present morally bankrupt characters clothed in the garments of modern humanity. Glued to wild and recurrent sexual habits, suggesting, as it were, the unceasing erosion of human dignity, these characters cling, with menacing sternness, to sex at all times and in all lieu. Like burning candles that consume their own heights, chronic sexual drives and activities in the works of the foregoing playwrights depict our world and diminish the statue of humanity. Set in an economically dejected and drug-redden East End of London, Shopping and F****ing serves as a canopy under which sits rancorous, impulsive, and rampant sex and drugs with the attendant loss they create. In a similar vein, Sarah Kane’s Blasted, set in a war-torn city, which duplicate the ruins of our societies, depicts depraved characters who have sex at whim and with impunity.

Author Biography
  1. Eugene Ngezem, Clayton State University

    Professor of English, Department of English

References

Basabe, E. Alejandro. “In Yer Face. The reception of Sarah Kane’s Blasted

on the British stage of the nasty nineties. 1995-2001”. Journal of Language Studies 4.3 (summer 2020): 1-26. Print.

David Alderson’s “Postgay drama: sexuality, narration and history in the plays of Mark

Ravenhill”. Contemporary Theatre Review 13.1 (2003): 82. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/1048680011000093586

De Vos, Jozef. “Ravenhill’s Wilde Game.” Crucible of Cultures: Anglophone Drama at

the Dawn of a New Millennium. Ed. Marc Maufort and Franca Bellarsi. New

York: P.I.E.-Peter Lang, 2002. 47–55. Print.

Horan, Thomas. “Myth and Narrative in Mark Ravenhill’s Shopping and Fucking.” Modern

Drama 55.2 (Summer 2012): 251-266. Print. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3138/md.55.2.251

Jo, Lindsay. ‘Partying hard’, ‘partying sometimes’ or ‘shopping’: young workers’ socializing

patterns and sexual, alcohol and illicit drug risk taking.” Critical Public Health13.1 (2003): 1-14.Print. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/0958159031000100198

Kane, Sarah. Blasted & Phaedra’s Love. London: Methuen, 1995. Print.

Kostić, Milena. “Pop Culture in Mark Ravenhill’s Plays Shopping and Fucking and Faust is

Dead.” Brno Studies in English 37.1 (2011): 161-172. Print.

Kuti, Elizabeth. “Tragic Plots from Bootle to Baghdad.” Contemporary Theatre Review. 18.4 (2008): 457-469. Print. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/10486800802379599

Kramer, Mimi. “Three for the Show.” Time. 150.5 (1997): 70-72. Ebsco. 17 May 2008

<http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=buh&AN=9707302967&sit

e=ehost-live>.

Ompad, C. Danielle et Al. ““Men Who Purchase Sex, Who Are They? An Interurban

Comparison.” Journal Of Urban Health: Bulletin Of The New York Academy Of Medicine [J Urban Health] 90.6 (Dec 20136):1166-80. Print.

Ravenhill, Mark. Shopping & Fucking. London: Methuen, 1996. Print.

Schnierer, Peter Paul. “Coward, Orton, Ravenhill and the Decline of the Unsayable.”

Journal for the Study of British Cultures 15.2 (2008): 121–134. Print.

Swager, Roger. “Evolution and Applications of the term consumerism: Theme and Variations.”

The Journal of Consumer Affairs 28.2 (Winter 1994): 347-360. Print. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-6606.1994.tb00856.x

Svich, Caridad. “Commerce and Morality in the Theatre of Mark Ravenhill.” Contemporary

Theatre Review 13.1 (2003): 81–95. Print. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/1048680031000077799

Varman, Rohit and Russell W. Belk. “Consuming postcolonial shopping malls.” Journal of

Marketing Management 28.1-2 (Feb 2012):62-84. Print. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/0267257X.2011.617706

Wentland, Jocelyn J and Reissing, Elke. “Casual sexual relationships: Identifying definitions for

one nightstands, booty calls, fuck buddies, and friends with benefits.” Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality 23.3 (2014): 167-177. Print. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3138/cjhs.2744

Downloads
Published
2023-01-01
Section
Journal Articles
License

Copyright (c) 2023 Eugene Ngezem

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Copyrights for articles published in IJIER journals are retained by the authors, with first publication rights granted to the journal. The journal/publisher is not responsible for subsequent uses of the work. It is the author's responsibility to bring an infringement action if so desired by the author for more visit Copyright & License.

How to Cite

Ngezem, E. (2023). Lust and Loss in Ravenhill’s Shopping and F****ing & Kane’s Blasted: Troubling Trends in a New Culture. International Journal for Innovation Education and Research, 11(1), 84-89. https://doi.org/10.31686/ijier.vol11.iss1.4051