After reading the east end tales im not sure how i feel about it. On the surface its a play about life in a place where people have funny accents and swear a lot, but i'd argue that even deeper than the rasicm, domestic abuse and voilence this play confronts us with our shocking ability to normalise and skirt over massive human tradgedy.
Particularly tale 5 where the start to the last paragrah is 'now dad can watch tv in peace' i personally found myself thiking about how much, or little i would be effected if a woman and two children were beaten to death next door to me.
I think of all places the east end was an important one to document because not only is it a stereotypically british place but it is also a extremly racially diverse place, which makes it ideal to look at not only issues that are relevant in the east end but issues that are relevant all over the country.
As a play, i think the east end tales is very different because it's almost half way between being a series of monologues and being a collection of poems, its very different to the piece we looked at last term and almost allows for more creative license because there isn't any stage direction etc.
Although the play brings to the forefront some very serious issues i think it almost allows us to find the humanity and comedy in the everyday misdemeanours of the characters, this is important because to some extent life can be shit, and we cant always wait for a policeman to show up and tell a guy off for using a racist term. I think the play illustrates that we do still have the ability to function with out the assistance of the authorities. We are not helpless.
My favourite tale was tale 3 because i think we can all identify with putting on some sort of a front or making an effort to be different either to disguise or forget somthing from our past or to convince ourselves that we are a different or better person. I think its very relateable because at some point in most of our lives we will have felt awful or will have done somthing awful or even have had somthing awful done to us, and at that moment or maybe even now still we will have felt like a lost little boy. I think Kennedy does an amazing job of taking not necessarily relatable situations and making the reader relate to an aspect of the character.
i was not there for the first lesson so i did not get to explore a tale within a group.