Arnold Wesker: *Roots* (1959)
*Roots* is the second play in Arnold Wesker's acclaimed **Wesker Trilogy**, following *Chicken Soup with Barley* and preceding *I'm Talking about Jerusalem* . First performed at the Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, in May 1959, the play later transferred to the Royal Court Theatre, London . It is a cornerstone of the **"kitchen sink" realism** movement and features an **"Angry Young Woman"** as its protagonist—a departure from the male-dominated narratives of the era .
**Plot Summary**
The play centers on **Beatie Bryant**, a young working-class woman from rural Norfolk who returns home after living in London . She has fallen in love with **Ronnie Kahn**, an intellectual socialist from a Jewish family (and the son from the first play). During her visit, Beatie passionately parrots Ronnie's political and cultural ideas to her family—farm labourers more concerned with agricultural wages than Marxist theory . The entire family eagerly awaits Ronnie's arrival for a grand tea. However, he never appears. Instead, a letter arrives announcing he is ending the relationship .
**Climax and Theme of Self-Discovery**
Humiliated and enraged by being "left standing like fools," the family turns on Beatie . In defending herself, she undergoes a profound transformation. She stops quoting Ronnie and, for the first time, discovers **her own voice**. The play's famous final speech is a furious indictment of commercial culture and intellectual passivity: *"The whole stinkin' commercial world insults us and we don't care a damn… we want the third-rate - we got it!"* .
**Legacy and Interpretation**
Initially rejected by the Royal Court's artistic directors, Wesker refused to rewrite the ending to include Ronnie's appearance, insisting the play was about expectation and self-realisation . *Roots* is celebrated for its authentic Norfolk dialect and its exploration of how intellectual awakening is meaningless without independent thought . While some critics found its slow pace and "slice-of-life" technique challenging, Bernard Levin called Beatie's final triumph "the most heart-lifting single moment I have ever seen upon a stage" .