A Fold in Time


Friday, October 10, 2003  4:44 PM


Storyline


To hear a story, or to read it straight through from start to finish, is to travel along a one-dimensional line.  A well-structured story has, however, more than one dimension.


Juxtaposing scenes shows that details that seem to be far apart in the telling (or the living) of a story may in fact be closely related.


Here is an example from the film “Contact,” in which a young girl’s drawing and a vision of paradise are no longer separated by the time it takes to tell (or live) the story:






(See my entry of Michaelmas 2002.)


For details of how time is “folded”
by artists and poets, see the following:


A Wrinkle in Time, by Madeleine L’Engle,


and Time Fold, by S. H. Cullinane.

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