According to theatre reviewer Rachel Halliburton, “Pinter has turned the game of reinventing the past into a psychological game of Russian roulette” (1). She is, of course, speaking of Harold Pinter’s 1971 Old Times. Throughout Old Times Pinter slowly develops the hazy story of a married couple, Deeley and Kate, and Kate’s odd friend Anna through strong pauses and incoherent stories of the past. These tales show that whether stories of the past are fact or fiction they can still be a powerful factor in how the story develops.
Harold Pinter has been known to write many plays that include memory, thus they are aptly known as “memory plays” (Eder 1). They have been given this name because, “they focus on the shifting borders between past and present, between reality and imagination” (Eder 4). This brings back the notion that Deeley is often the girls’ only link to the present. Doris Eder cites Pinter himself saying, “there can be no hard distinction between what is real and what is unreal, nor between what is true and what is false. A thing is not necessarily either true or false; it can be both…” (4). All of this is evident in Old Times as anything Anna speaks of needs to be looked at through many lenses. At one minute she would be speaking of casserole and another she is talking about Kate (Gainor et al 1022). Pinter once told Mel Gussow, “I… feel more and more that the past is not past, that it never was past. It’s present” (Eder 5). The epitome of this statement is how the story from Anna’s past about the man crying in her room on pages 1026 and 1027 is repeated during Kate’s ending monologue on pages 1040 and 1041 (Gainor et al). Accoring to Doris Eder:
The… question Old Times poses is whether time ‘has been regained and c...
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Where are the memories of our pasts held? In scrapbooks full of photographs, or perhaps written on the pages of a locked diary? Picture though, something as simple and ordinary as a closet full of clothes. Think about its contents, where they have been worn, what they have been through, the stories attached to each item. The nameless protagonist of Diane Schoemperlen’s short story Red Plaid Shirt does this as she recalls a snippet of her past life with each article of clothing she picks up. Red plaid shirt, blue sweatshirt, brown cashmere sweater, yellow evening gown, black leather jacket…each item has a tale of its very own, and when combined they reveal the full story of the main character’s life.
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Sharon Olds’s poem, “I Go Back to May 1937,” is an emotional piece that takes the reader back to the early days as the speaker’s existence was first thought about. The speaker is a female who describes the scene when her parents first met; she does this to show her wrestling thoughts as she wishes she could prevent this first encounter. She speaks about this topic because of the horrendous future of regret and sorrow that her family would experience, and also to contemplate her own existence if her parents had never met in May of 1937. Olds uses forms of contrasting figurative language, an ironic plot, and a regretful tone to convey the conflict between the speaker and her parents while she fully comes to understanding of past actions, and how these serve as a way for her to release her feelings on the emotional subject.
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