A look at representations of fear and desire in Bram Stoker's "Dracula."
Book Review # 139941 |
1,750 words (
approx. 7 pages ) |
4 sources |
MLA |
|
$ 33.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper analyzes the central role of fear and desire in Bram Stoker's 19th century novel "Dracula." According to the paper, Stoker was examining the fear of sexual desire that was so pervasive in Victorian England. The paper concludes by stating that Stoker was intent upon demonstrating through the theme, plot, characterization, and ultimate outcome of the novel that sexual desire, especially in women, was inherently dangerous, destructive, and had to be repressed for the good of society.
From the Paper
"Analyzing the central role of fear and desire in Bram Stoker's 19th century novel Dracula indicates that Stoker was examining the fear of sexual desire that was so pervasive in Victorian England. He was intent upon demonstrating through the theme, plot, characterization, and ultimate outcome of the novel that sexual desire, especially in women, was inherently dangerous, destructive, and had to be repressed for the good of society."
Tags:fear, desire, dracula
An analysis of the poem, "Desire" by Molly Peacock.
Poem Review # 141167 |
1,000 words (
approx. 4 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA |
|
$ 21.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
The paper describes how Peacock uses a combination of poetry elements to help her define the meaning of desire. The paper examines the poetry elements that are diction and tone, sensory imagery, figures of speech, sound and rhyme, and irony. The paper explains that Molly Peacock uses these elements to successfully define the meaning of desire.
From the Paper
"How would a person define the meaning of desire? What words would a poet use to define and give meaning to desire? Desire, like love, is difficult to define. Molly Peacock wrote her poem, "Desire," in 1984. In Peacock's poem, "Desire," she wants her audience to understand the meaning of desire and she calls her poem, "Desire." She uses a combination of poetry elements to help her define the meaning of desire. In order for the poet to express her theme of desire, she uses several different poetry elements including diction and tone, sensory imagery, figures of speech, sound and rhyme, and irony."
Tags:desire, elements, theme
A review of Tennessee William's play "A Streetcar Named Desire".
Book Review # 86079 |
900 words (
approx. 3.6 pages ) |
4 sources |
2005
|
$ 19.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper discusses two of the main characters in the Tennessee William's drama "A Streetcar Named Desire". This paper also discusses some of the sources available reviewing this play. The sources used provide excellent insight into the study of "Streetcar Named Desire" and into the playwright himself. The paper also reviews some of William's other works.
From the Paper
"'A Streetcar Named Desire' by Tennessee Williams has an interesting title that first attracted me to his play. After reading the first few lines, I found myself interested because the description of the setting had details that captured my attention further. Williams uses words such as "raffish charm" (Williams 1797) and "quaintly ornamented gables" (Williams 1797) that paint a picture of the section of New Orleans where the action starts. The action of the characters led to questions in my mind after I finished reading the play. This play raised many questions about the human spirit and the ways that people deal with situations that they face. The two sisters in the play, Blanche and Stella, were raised in similar circumstances. Why did these two sisters deal with life in ways that are so different? The relationship between Stella and her husband also presents important questions."
Tags:streetcar, named, desire
An analysis of how sexual desires cause destruction in Tennessee Williams' play "A Streetcar Named Desire."
Book Review # 133273 |
750 words (
approx. 3 pages ) |
0 sources |
MLA |
|
$ 16.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
The paper analyzes Tennessee Williams' play "A Streetcar Named Desire," and the destruction of the three main characters of Blanche, Stella and Stanley by their inability to control their sexual desires. The writer discusses how Blanche ultimately goes mad, Stella retreats into this naive world and STanley becomes the animal Blanche seemed to unleash in him. The way Blanche got to New Orleans and the name of the street all three live on is also discussed.
From the Paper
"Bathing and drunkenness are two common threads exposing sexual tension in the play A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams. Even the title of the play suggests the sexual tension between the characters. There are three main characters in the play: Blanche, Stella and Stanley. All three are driven by their sexual desire. Blanche is running away from her past that is filled with sexual promiscuity including a sexual relationship with one of her male students. Stella is so attracted to Stanley physically that she loses all perspective regarding her sister and her marriage. Stanley is a dockworker so filled with sexual prowess that...."
Tags:instinct, desire, dead
An analysis of the themes of power and conflict in Tennessee Williams' drama "A Streetcar Named Desire".
Analytical Essay # 120764 |
1,250 words (
approx. 5 pages ) |
11 sources |
MLA | 2008
|
$ 25.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This analysis of Tennessee Williams' drama "A Streetcar Named Desire" focuses on the idea of power and conflict as it is played out between Blanche DuBois and Stanley Kowalski. The analysis maintains that the powerful brutes of the world like Stanley are responsible for the destruction of hope and innocence in tender individuals like Blanche.
From the Paper
"A central theme of Tennessee Williams' drama "A Streetcar Named Desire" revolves around innocence and reality, one that plays itself out in the conflict and struggle for power between Blanche DuBois and her brother-in-law, Stanley Kowalski. After being subjected to a variety of men in her life, Blanche DuBois is scared and scarred. She visits her sister Stella in the hopes of building a new and respectable life for herself with a suitor. However, Blanche continues to remain lost in an..."
Tags:sex, physical lust, illusions, pretensions, control, rape, insanity, South, Williams, Streetcar, desire
This paper focuses on the author's use of symbols and metaphors, specifically light, in Tennessee William's play, "A Streetcar Named Desire".
Analytical Essay # 58795 |
1,558 words (
approx. 6.2 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2003
|
$ 30.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
Williams's play, "A Streetcar Named Desire," is the story of the final decay of Blanche DuBois, a woman who fell from grace until finally losing her mind. This paper focuses on Blanche's lies and how Williams symbolized them in several different ways, including the use of light. It shows how, throughout the entire play, Tennessee Williams uses light to symbolize Blanche's deceptions as they differentiate from the actual truth that is slowly revealed.
From the Paper
"A Streetcar Named Desire is a great play, where Tennessee Williams uses many different types of symbols and metaphors for other things in the play, and his usage of light to show Blanche DuBois' artificial realism was incredible. The way that each event in the story where Blanche was involved directly with lighting led up to a later important event in the story keeps the reader interested. Blanche's lies were eventually her undoing, if she had gone to visit her sister and been able to stand in the open light and face the truth about her life, she may have been married to Mitch. However she was scared of what she would see if stayed in the light, and more scared of what other people would see in her, so she hid in the metaphorical shadows created by Tennessee Williams and tried, unsuccessfully, to live in her false reality."
Tags:american, desire, light, literature, named, streetcar, sybolism, tennesse, williams
A literary analysis of "A Streetcar Named Desire" by Tennessee Williams.
Term Paper # 75074 |
792 words (
approx. 3.2 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2006
|
$ 16.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper is a critical analysis of Tennessee Williams "A Streetcar Named Desire", focusing on the character Blanche and what she symbolizes.
From the Paper
"In A Street Car Named Desire, Tennessee Williams displays the character Blanche having many issues. She tells fibs to protect herself from being looked upon disapprovingly. But her secrets are unveiled when Stanley, Blanche's brother-in-law, bumps into a couple of Blanche's acquaintances. Blanche symbolizes all beautiful women who are insecure because they have something they cannot let go or hide from."
Tags:analysis, blanche, desire, literary, named, streetcar, symbol, symbolism
This paper discusses the sexual tension present in the play 'A Streetcar Named Desire' by Tennessee Williams.
Book Review # 103853 |
750 words (
approx. 3 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2008
|
$ 16.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
In this article the writer analyzes the play 'A Streetcar Named Desire' by Tennessee Williams and notes that bathing and drunkenness are two common threads exposing sexual tension in the play. The writer points out that even the title of the play suggests the sexual tension between the characters. Further, the writer looks at the connections between desire and death as portrayed in the play. The writer maintains that it is as if Williams is telling us that from too much desire only death can come. The writer notes that Stanley, the most dead of all three characters becomes numb to his reactive behavior. The writer concludes that Stanley is trapped in his uncontrollable animalistic sexual desire destined to live like an animal surviving purely by instinct.
From the Paper
"Stanley is a man's man--full of animal instinct and desire. He cannot control himself in any regard. Stanley cannot control his temper so he beats his pregnant wife. He can't sequester his passion for Blanche so he rapes her. He can't bare losing Stella so he screams for her at the top of his lungs proclaiming his need and love for her. Stanley is all about sexual desire--it rules and runs his life.
"Drunkenness and bathing are the soothsayers for Blanche and Stanley when their desires become overwhelming. Blanche uses a bath to soothe her nerves and to try and wash away her sexually promiscuous path."
Tags:promiscuity, relationship, passion, destruction
This paper discusses the concept of satisfying desire by looking within, by looking at the discourse of 'desire' in Margaret Laurence's "The Diviners".
Book Review # 105659 |
1,277 words (
approx. 5.1 pages ) |
6 sources |
MLA | 2008
|
$ 25.95
More information
|
New! Look inside the paper
|
Add to cart
Abstract
In this article, the writer discusses that in Margaret Laurence's 1975 novel 'The Diviners', desire becomes a vehicle of feminist and personal liberation for the middle-aged protagonist, Morag Gunn. The writer notes that more than anything, Morag desires to find a true, rather than a false identity. The writer maintains that it is not the content of her work, but Margaret Laurence's wisdom, mixed with irony and humor, that brings insight to the reader. The writer concludes that the author writes in favor of a mature decision to cease to yearn for external change, and to satisfy one's desire through internal reflection.
From the Paper
"But it is not movement that gives her peace. Rather it is actively seeking peaceful solitude within, not finding elevated social status or fulfillment in her marital or extramarital relationships. Changing her external geography is not a complete form of self-actualization for the protagonist. The novel stresses that the liberating power of desire is not only found in sexuality or a change of place for a woman, but simply a desire to achieve a complete sense of identity and selfhood in solitude can be just as empowering.
"Morag's desire for authentic selfhood shows her continually wrestling with what society construes as status, and what she believes has real worth and merit. For example, initially, Morag sought her self-actualization through her desire to experience life outside of a provincial town and outside of a life limited by education. But this mode of liberation became stifling because of the relationship she had with her husband, even though he taught at a university. She was still constrained by feelings of inferiority and a sense that she was not living her own life."
Tags:Morag, internal, reflection, relationship
This paper explores desire, bad decisions and society in Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest" and Christopher Marlowe's "The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus".
Comparison Essay # 111733 |
1,143 words (
approx. 4.6 pages ) |
2 sources |
MLA | 2009
|
$ 23.95
More information
|
New! Look inside the paper
|
Add to cart
Abstract
The paper examines "The Importance of Being Earnest", by Oscar Wilde and "The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus", by Christopher Marlowe and shows how both of the main characters in the works, Jack and Dr. Faustus, are men that are driven by needs and desires. The paper illustrates how each author brings out the danger of seeking something that does not belong to us, the poor choices desire causes us to make, and the influence society has on the human psyche's desire.
From the Paper
"Both plays explore the dangers of seeking something that does not belong to you and should not belong to you. In The Importance of Being Earnest, Jack desperately wants a life that is different from his own. He goes to great extremes to make this double life as real as possible. He secretly detests the Victorian values that he outwardly respects and honors. Jack is clearly a hypocrite but he likes it that way. As Earnest, he can live the life he desires without tarnishing the reputation of good Jack. His explanation for his double life is, that a "high moral tone can hardly be said to conduce very much to either one's health or one's happiness" (Wilde 670)."
Tags:psyche, emotions