Real Time

by

Amit Chaudhuri

Small Talk and Superficiality Theme Analysis

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Amit Chaudhuri’s “Real Time” follows an upper middle class Indian couple, Mr. Mitra and Mrs. Mitra, to a shraddh, or Hindu mourning ceremony, for a relative named Anjali who has committed suicide. Driving to the shraddh, Mr. and Mrs. Mitra only talk about logistical matters, such as whether to buy flowers or which road to take to Anjali’s parents’ apartment. Likewise, the mourners at the shraddh diligently make small talk about events unrelated to Anjali’s death: when Mr. Mitra runs into a professional acquaintance, Mr. Sarbadhikari, they talk about “whether civil engineering had a future as a career today.” Mr. Mitra only makes one attempt to discuss Anjali’s death — asking his wife, “Why did she do it?” — and his question goes unanswered.

The dominance of small talk during the drive and at the shraddh mirrors Mr. Mitra’s internal monologue. Throughout the story, he is consumed with issues of physical discomfort, noting that his feet are “perspiring” because he’s wearing the wrong shoes, searching for a warm bottle of soda that won’t aggravate his sore throat, and finally complaining to Mrs. Mitra on their way out that he’s “quite ravenous.” He reflects on Anjali’s death only intermittently, and can only focus on her for a few minutes before his mind skitters to a trivial issue like his hunger. However, this inability to grapple with Anjali’s suicide isn’t an indictment of Mr. Mitra alone: everyone at the shraddh is equally committed to avoiding the topic of death and focusing on the banal. Depicting the collective commitment to pointless small talk, the story points at the emotional emptiness of gatherings like this one. And by showing how Mr. Mitra’s thoughts mirrors the gathering’s social tenor, Chaudhuri suggests that an inability to speak frankly with others corrupts characters’ inner lives and prevents them from truly knowing themselves.

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Small Talk and Superficiality ThemeTracker

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Small Talk and Superficiality Quotes in Real Time

Below you will find the important quotes in Real Time related to the theme of Small Talk and Superficiality.
Real Time Quotes

“Well, what should we do?” Mr. Mitra’s face, as he turned to look at his wife, was pained, as if he was annoyed she hadn’t immediately come up with the answer.

“Do what you want to do quickly,” she said, dabbing her cheek with her sari. “We’re already late.” She looked at the small dial of her watch. He sighed; his wife never satisfied him when he needed her most; and quite probably it was the same story the other way around.

Related Characters: Mr. Mitra (speaker), Mrs. Mitra (speaker), Anjali
Related Symbols: Flowers
Page Number: 398
Explanation and Analysis:
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He was wearing a white cotton shirt and terrycotton trousers because of the heat, and shoes; he now regretted the shoes. He remembered he hadn’t been able to find his sandals in the cupboard. His feet, swathed in socks, were perspiring.

Related Characters: Mr. Mitra, Mrs. Mitra, Anjali
Related Symbols: Flowers
Page Number: 398
Explanation and Analysis:

As they passed a petrol pump, Mr. Mitra wondered what view traditional theology took of this matter, and how the rites accommodated events such as this — she had jumped from a third-floor balcony — which couldn’t, after all, be entirely uncommon. Perhaps there was no ceremony. In his mind’s eye, when he tried to imagine the priest, or the long rows of tables at which people were fed, he saw a blank.

Related Characters: Mr. Mitra, Anjali
Page Number: 399
Explanation and Analysis:

They didn’t expect it would be a proper shraddh ceremony; they didn’t think people would be fed. So Mrs. Mitra had told the boy at home, firmly so as to impress her words upon him, “We’ll be back by one o’clock! Cook the rice and keep the daal and fish ready!” Without mentioning it clearly, they’d decided they must go to the club afterward and get some cookies for tea.

Related Characters: Mrs. Mitra (speaker), Mr. Mitra
Page Number: 400
Explanation and Analysis:

He'd held some sort of important position in an old British industrial company that had turned into a large public-sector concern a decade after independence: British Steel, renamed National Steel. He was now standing next to a television set, whose convex screen was dusty, and talking to someone.

Mr. Mitra seemed to remember that Mr. Talukdar had two sons in America, and that the sons had children. But Anjali had no children, and that might have made things worse for her.

Related Characters: Mr. Mitra, Anjali, Mr. Talukdar
Page Number: 401
Explanation and Analysis:

He felt bored; and he noticed a few others, too, some of whom he knew, looking out of place. Shraddh ceremonies weren’t right without their mixture of convivial pleasure and grief; and he couldn’t feel anything as complete as grief. He’d known Anjali slightly; how well do you know your wife’s distant relations, after all? He’d known more about her academic record, one or two charming anecdotes to do with her success at school, her decent first-class degree, and about her husband, Gautam Poddar, diversifying into new areas of business, than about her.

Related Characters: Mr. Mitra, Mrs. Mitra, Anjali, Gautam Poddar
Page Number: 401
Explanation and Analysis:

He had a vaguely unsatisfying feeling, as if the last half hour had lacked definition.

Once inside the car, he said to his wife, “I don’t know about you, but I’m quite ravenous.”

Related Characters: Mr. Mitra (speaker), Mrs. Mitra, Anjali
Page Number: 402
Explanation and Analysis: