The Burial at Thebes and A Streetcar Named Desire, gender inequalities are the main cause of conflict. In these plays the principal characters are women who struggle forcefully in a world where men enforce a lifestyle in which women are seen as inferior. In contrast, the sisters that seem to not have much importance are fundamental because their inaction define the course of the play. Throughout Sophocles’ The Burial at Thebes and Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, the characters of Ismene…
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Desdemona is attracted to the mystery and masculinity of Othello and his escapades (hero-worship) Othello is physically dominant here: slaps Desdemona, ends up strangling her Streetcar: Stella and Stanley’s marriage based on physical attraction Class-difference puts strain on marriage, especially when Blanche brings it to forefront Stereotypical gender roles are in full force here The men in both these plays are clearly the dominant figures in these marriages. The relationships are…
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viewing A Streetcar Named Desire in two different mediums that external and internal visualizations are not one and the same. After reading the Tennessee Williams play, A Streetcar Named Desire, I had a fairly defined representation of how I perceived the main characters within this play. Williams presented the tragic story of a woman hiding behind the veneer of the social privileged who is brutally forced over the edge of insanity by an envious, vindictive lower class male. The protagonist, Blanche Dubois…
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The text ‘A Streetcar named Desire’ describes and explores the ideas of existing worlds as well as those of imagined ones as well. The text is a story, which explores and describes the characters of Stella and Stanley Kowalski as well as Blanche Dubois. It is a story of tragedy and failure, which follows the destruction of Blanche’s mental health and Stella and Stanley’s destructive relationship. The text portrays a realistic version of life in the 1940’s filled with sexism other social issues, which…
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directorial notes on the 1947 stage production of A Streetcar Named Desire, Elia Kazan suggested that through watching the decline of Blanche, ‘[the audience] begin to realise that they are sitting in at the death of something extraordinary […] and then they feel the tragedy.’ It is with this idea that I wish to explore the emotional and psychological decline of Tennessee Williams’ protagonist in A Streetcar Named Desire, Blanche DuBois. As we watch Blanche remove herself from the reality that holds nothing…
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controversial ideas of sexuality, violence, and mental instability, Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire was awarded the Pulitzer Prize among his other works and is known as one of the best dramas in American contemporary literature. This captivating play brings attention to the theme that calamity strikes when an individual is driven by desire. By observing the events in the life of the protagonist Blanche Dubois and the multifarious literary elements found throughout the play, this message…
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''A Streetcar Named Desire" by American playwright Tennessee Williams is a play about Blanche who is a schoolteacher from Laurel, Mississippi, arrives at the New Orleans apartment of her sister Stella Kowalski and her husband Stanley Kowalski because she has nowhere else to go, lose her plantation and the family home Belle Reve, due to the mismanagement . Her life totally changes when she faces with her lies, desires and especially gender discrimination while living at her sister’s apartment. Actually…
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How and why is the Grotesque Used in Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire? Throughout this semester, we were introduced to varying degrees of literary styles and themes. From the epiphanies discovered through American Realism, to the skepticism explored through Literary Modernism, to the conflicts of social conformity and individualism approached by a Post-Modernistic America and its writers. We have had the great opportunity of being exposed to individuals who questioned and pushed…
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A Streetcar Named Desire and the Pursuit of Happiness During the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, the pursuit of happiness is a theme that is recurrent in American Dramas. In A Streetcar Named Desire, this particular motif is emphasized through Blanche DuBois’ journey throughout the play. Due to the loss of her late husband, Allen, for which she blames herself, Blanche was forced to live with a hole in her heart, longing for happiness to fill the void. Ms. Dubois developed a coping mechanism…
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in the play as a whole is this extract from scene 10? Throughout A Streetcar Named Desire, the style with which Tennessee Williams crafts his work and moulds the intricacies and imaginings of his mind onto the page is intrinsic to the way in which we, as the reader, interpret the play. Scene 10 is the endgame of the underlying tension that sticks to the bitter relationship forged by our two main characters, Stanley and Blanche. Williams employs several linguistic and dramatic techniques to convey…
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