An examination of the characters' traits evident in the main characters of "A Street Car Named Desire" by Tennessee Williams.
Book Review # 114338 |
1,437 words (
approx. 5.7 pages ) |
7 sources |
MLA | 2009
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$ 28.95
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Abstract
This paper explores the issues of character, themes and values presented in Tenessee Williams' classic play, "A Street Car Named Desire", and the manner in which Williams infused these ideas into the play. The paper specifically examines the character traits presented in the play that are expressed in the characters of Blanche DuBois, Stella Kowalski and Stanley Kowalski.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Character
Themes
Values
Conclusion
From the Paper
"The aforementioned line is also a foreshadowing of the events that are to come as it pertains to Stanley raping Blanche (Mermelstein). It is evident that Stanley did not have certain traditional values such as not hitting women, providing for his household and treating guess with respect. It is extremely apparent that he has no respect at all for women; he beats his wife and rapes his sister-in-law. Although Blanche often lived in a fantasy world, her feelings about Stanley were accurate and anything but delusional. Blanche recognized that Stanley did not share their "values" and attempted to get her sister to see him for who he really was."
Tags:themes, values, tradition, experiences
An analysis of the play, "A Street Car Named Desire", by Tennessee Williams.
Term Paper # 93213 |
701 words (
approx. 2.8 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2007
|
$ 15.95
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Abstract
The paper describes how the majority of Williams' work is set in the American South, and depicts a gothic feel of the area in which the contemporary decay is pitted against the old refined ways of previous generations. The paper further analyzes the character of Blanche Du Bois from "A Street Car Name Desire". The paper discusses how Williams claimed that the overarching theme in this play was the negative impact that conventional society has upon the sensitive nonconformist individual.
From the Paper
"Laura is based on Williams' sister, who had a frontal lobotomy with her parents' approval and who spent most of life in an institution (Jacobs). Tom is based on Williams himself, who went to work at a shoe factory to help support the family while his father traveled as a traveling salesman (Jacobs). He also explored issues such as homosexuality, sex, domestic violence, and the falsehood of religion within his work, which usually shocked his audiences (Jacobs)."
Tags:O'Connor, Faulkner, Gothic, South, Stella, Jessica, Tandy, 1947
An overview of this play by Tennessee Williams.
Analytical Essay # 65303 |
1,130 words (
approx. 4.5 pages ) |
2 sources |
MLA | 2005
$ 23.95
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Abstract
Tennessee Williams', "A Street Car Named Desire" is a look into the modern world and how people have to work hard to get what they want. The paper examines the theme of the play, the characters involved and the tone. It also examines images and symbols used in the play.
From the Paper
"When it comes to characters in this play, Blanche is by far the most complicated. Through the play Blanche shows strong and weak points. Blanche is trying to save something that can never be saved, and the slack she gets back from other characters in the play, mostly Stanley is very cruel. As a character in this play, Blanche is admired because she fights so hard for something she wants so badly. Even though Blanche is so strong when it comes to what she wants, she fails in places where she needs to be so determined."
Tags:Blanche, Stanley, Southern, Belle
An analysis of "A Streetcar Named Desire", by Tennessee Williams.
Analytical Essay # 142265 |
1,250 words (
approx. 5 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA |
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Abstract
The paper explores the uses of lyrics and the sincere hope to stir the audience in "A Streetcar Named Desire", by Tennessee Williams. More specificallly, the paper examines the use of repetition, the use of colloquial language and voice, varied tonal rhythms and dramatic punctuation.
From the Paper
""A Streetcar Named Desire", written by Tennessee Williams, is a benchmark dramatic play that offers many qualities to the viewer and/or reader. When one comes across such a touching and paramount work of American theatre, it is natural that one should dissect why this occurs. "A Streetcar Named Desire" evokes a lot of emotion when interacting with the reader or audience, and it does this seamlessly through its use of language. Language= in a theatrical sense- seems to be the lifeblood of a good work of writing. Surely, "A Streetcar Named Desire" uses a canon of qualities to make an impact. These qualities are lyrical and sincerely hope to stir the..."
Tags:williams, play, dialogue
An analysis of the sibling rivalries and relationships in Tennessee Williams' works, "A Street Car Named Desire" and "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof".
Analytical Essay # 73366 |
904 words (
approx. 3.6 pages ) |
4 sources |
MLA | 2004
|
$ 19.95
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This paper discusses the factors that contribute to the complexities in sibling relationships through an analysis of the siblings in Tennessee Williams' works, "A Streetcar Named Desire," and "A Cat on a Hot Tin Roof".
From the Paper
"A great deal of literature deals with the impact of birth order, environment, parenting and other aspects related to sibling relationships. Both film versions of Tennessee Williams' dramas "A Streetcar Named Desire" and "Cat On A Hot Tin Roof" feature intense sibling rivalries. In "Streetcar", the rivalry is between Blanche DuBois and her younger sister Stella Kowalski. In "Cat", the rivalry is between Gooper Pollitt and his younger brother Brick. The rivalry between Blanche and Stella is more one of attachment rivalry than is..."
Tags:jealousy, parenting, environment, in-laws, lifestyle behaviors, love, truth, illusion, materialism, attachment, brothers, sisters
Tennessee Williams was a great American liturgist. This paper covers his life from birth to death and also summarizes two plays.
Essay # 59612 |
2,574 words (
approx. 10.3 pages ) |
5 sources |
APA | 2005
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$ 46.95
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Tennessee Williams had an arduous life, living with a dysfunctional family. This paper overviews his family life and explains how it gave birth to two of the greatest plays in American history, "The Glass Menagerie" and "A Streetcar Named Desire".
From the Paper
"Tennessee Williams wrote some of America's most famous plays. His life was riddled with obscurity and pain. He had an absent father, an eccentric mother, and a mentally ill sister. Tennessee used his writing as a form of escape and reflection of his life. Two of his most famous plays, The Glass Menagerie and A Streetcar Named Desire, are perfect examples of his literary talents and use of incorporating his own life into his scripts."
Tags:american, desire, gay, glass, homosexual, lanier, menagerie, named, play, playwright, script, streetcar, tennessee, theater, thomas, williams
This paper describes the character of Laura in "The Glass Menagerie" by Tennessee Williams.
Book Review # 91858 |
1,093 words (
approx. 4.4 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2007
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$ 22.95
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Abstract
This paper introduces, discusses, and analyzes the play "The Glass Menagerie" by Tennessee Williams. Specifically it highlights the character of Laura in the play and what she represents. The paper's author describes Laura as afraid of everything, including life. The paper also examines the relationship between Laura and her mother.
From the Paper
"Laura Winfield is a grown young woman who still lives at home with her mother and brother. One of her legs is shorter than the other and so she wears a brace on her leg, and she is very self-conscious about it. She thinks it makes her unattractive and people make fun of her because she wears it. That is not the truth, however. In reality, her brace is not really that noticeable. Laura is handicapped, but it is not the brace that is her handicap. The way she lives her life is really her handicap, and it makes her a recluse and afraid. She is afraid of life and of really living life, and so, she uses her handicap as an excuse not to have to really participate in life."
Tags:Tenessee, Williams, Glass, Menagerie, South
This paper reviews the human experiences confronted in Tennessee Williams' masterpiece "The Glass Menagerie".
Analytical Essay # 83893 |
1,125 words (
approx. 4.5 pages ) |
1 source |
2005
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$ 23.95
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Abstract
This paper explores how, in Tennessee Williams' "The Glass Menagerie", a mother's solipsism and self-absorption have destroyed the relationship between her and her children. The author points out that, like pieces of a glass menagerie, the family members are stuck in grid they really cannot escape from. The paper relates that the irony is that the tighter the mother clings to her children, the more distant they become.
From the Paper
"Tennessee Williams' famous play, "The Glass Menagerie", is a remarkable rendering of the human experience. This paper will explore human experience as it is presented in Williams' master-work. Specifically, this paper will talk about the tragedy visited upon the family by a mother who cannot let the past go and cannot bear to confront the present. By retreating to tyrannically control those things she can -chiefly her children - she ensures that they will not be able to escape the past, either. With that in mind, this paper turns now to Tennessee William's haunting masterpiece. In the preface to the play, Williams describes Amanda Wingfield as `not paranoiac, but her life is paranoia' (5). She is a petite women of 'confused vitality' clinging pertinaciously to a world that no longer exists (Williams 5)."
Tags:williams, menagerie, abandonment
Looks at the how Tennessee Williams' life paralleled his play "The Glass Menagerie".
Essay # 33644 |
2,650 words (
approx. 10.6 pages ) |
9 sources |
2002
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$ 47.95
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Abstract
This eleven-page undergraduate academic paper discusses Tennessee Williams and how his personal life parallels and reflects the lives of the fictional characters in his play "The Glass Menagerie".
Tags:williams, glass, menagerie
Discussion of the conflict between Blanche and Stanley and illusion and reality, in Tennessee Williams' "A Street Car Named Desire".
Analytical Essay # 18081 |
900 words (
approx. 3.6 pages ) |
1 source |
1990
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$ 19.95
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From the Paper
"In A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams, a key conflict in the play is the threat Blanche poses to the domesticity of Stanley and Stella, and from Stanley's point of view this is bound with his belief in reality as contrasted with Blanche's desire to live by illusion. Stanley is a character who is open and direct. From the beginning of the play he is made to seem elemental. The first line of the play is Stanley yelling up at his wife, "Hey, there! Stella, baby!" (p. 13). He tosses her a package of raw meat, emphasizing his brute nature and the sexual relationship always between them. He is rough and crude, but he is also honest and open. He says what he means and challenges anyone to dispute him. Stanley is happy with his domestic life as it is, and Blanche enters and disrupts all that."
When Blanche and Stanley first meet, both are uneasy. Stanl
Tags:DRAMA: AMERICAN