The collapse of ‘really existing socialism’ in 1989 caught many
political commentators by surprise because it happened so quickly and decisively.
Within a year, however, David Edgar had joined fellow playwrights Caryl Churchill,
Howard Brenton, and Tariq Ali in exploring the consequences and changing
circumstances of those events. Beginning with The Shape of the Table
(1990), his closest look at practical negotiation and the transfer of power in a
formal political setting, Edgar wrote three plays over the next decade which form a
trilogy following the unfolding drama of post-Communist politics. The other two
plays, Pentecost and The Prisoner’s Dilemma,
were written five and ten years on, respectively, when the politics of immigration
and refugees generated deeply divisive fault lines for all of Europe. The former
Eastern bloc countries faced extremely difficult problems establishing workable
democracies because they were troubled by ultra-nationalism, ethnic conflict, racism,
financial instability, and a lack of effective leadership – not to mention
external pressures and ‘assistance’ that were often internally
perceived as meddling and arrogance on the part of the West. These three plays are
Edgar’s most detailed treatment of the problem of democracy itself, and it is
no coincidence that in their moment they addressed issues that the West, no less than
the former East, was finding increasingly intractable.
There are at least two ways to view Edgar’s preoccupation with this material:
first, as a writer and activist on the Left, the end of the cold war and the collapse
of the USSR and its eastern and central European (ECE) satellites meant a serious
confrontation with the question of what was ‘left of the Left’ in terms
of ideology if not programme, historical lessons if not future objectives. Almost
overnight ‘socialism’ became identified in the West as a failed
project, and conservative scholars and commentators were quick to begin the rhetoric,
now only too familiar, of a ‘new world order’ in which capitalism was
the triumphant global system and socialism was relegated to the dustbin of history.
Probably Francis Fukuyama’s The End of History and the Last
Man (1992) is the key touchstone text for the popular conviction that
western liberal democracy/capitalism would be universalized as the final form
of human government/economy. Thus obviously for a committed writer on the
Left, like Edgar, it was important to examine the changes that were underway in order
to understand what was happening and also to begin a debate about what price the new
democracies would pay for their fledgling arrangements, and what liabilities their
communist histories and their years of satellite politics would have for attempts to
reconfigure their polities.