"Gender roles in a streetcar named desire" Essays and Research Papers

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    VII The name A Streetcar Named Desire comes from the actual streetcar that Blanche has to take for her new life. In a sense‚ it is the story’s plot. In the story‚ Blanche is perusing desire with a rich man to live a life of desire. Ironically enough‚ everything is completely the opposite. She is tormented and emotionally and mentally torn to pieces. Everything that transpires is completely ruined. Her urge for happiness and desire was inevitably her undoing. She ends up living

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    supposed to set a person free‚ but more often than not‚ it turns out to be an immense burden that leaves lasting damage on its unsuspecting victims. In any relationship‚ truth is an vital part in it’s success. However in Tennessee William’s A Streetcar Named Desire being truthful is not commonly utilized‚ and throughout the play‚ there is an abundance of lies and betrayal from the moment Blanche Dubois comes to town. Whether there are good or bad experiences in a writer’s life‚ their respective experiences

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    A Streetcar Named Desire Symbolism is an important literary device used to give the reader an understanding of a character. Tennessee Williams‚ with the use of symbolism‚ brings his character’s alive in his play‚ A Streetcar name desire. In the story the reader follows a young southern woman by the name of Blanche Dubois as she moves to New Orleans to live with her sister‚ Stella‚ and her brother-in-law‚ Stanley. From there the reader slowly sees the Blanche’s descent into madness as she begins

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    The rape at the end of scene 10 is clearly the key moment for the motif of violence. I think this moment ties together all of the themes that are reflected by the theme of violence‚ and rape not only incorporates physical but also psychological violence‚ further accentuating the importance of this moment. Violence is often seen as a result of conflict in the play‚ and this moment clearly results from all of the conflicts explored throughout the text. Primarily‚ the conflict between Blanche and

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    SBlanche’s Madness Blanche DuBois in Tennesse William’s A Streetcar Named Desire suffers from living in a culture dominated by men‚ the human condition of desire and the insecurity and madness that follow; sexuality and her self-pressure to maintain self worth are the source of her cast off from society. The madness is launched when she loses her money‚ family‚ husband‚ job‚ and continues to lose her youthful appearance. Blanche’s insanity can be deemed acceptable from the surface because of her

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    Analysis of performance choices that relate to the historical and cultural context of A Streetcar Named Desire Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire highlighted many social issues of 1940s America through theatrical apparatus such as stage direction‚ linguistic tools and using characters metaphorically. These issues include the marked inequalities between social classes‚ the subjugation and oppression of women and racial divides. Williams’ realistic approach to characterisation sought to

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    Examine the construction of masculinity in A Streetcar Named Desire and Death of a Salesman. In both A Streetcar Named Desire and Death of a Salesman there is a male figure at the head of both families who assert and express their masculinity in quite dissimilar ways. Referring to the screen adaptations of both plays‚ Stanley Kowalski is a strong‚ aggressive and forthright individual whereas Willy Loman through stature as well as speech is a bumbling‚ weak and nervous fool‚ driven by his own delusions

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    In Tennessee William’s A Streetcar Named Desire‚ there is a constant battle between fantasy and reality. Blanche represents the desire to escape reality and her adversary‚ Stanley‚ represents the harsh reality of life. The battle between these two forces is revealed to the audience through the symbolic use of light and darkness in the play. Blanche is so traumatized and burdened by the reality of her life that her only way to cope is to retreat into a fantasy world. She comes to stay with her sister

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    Power for women in America in the 1950s was a different for women than in present day. The plays Fences by August Wilson and A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams‚ examines two different women from different social classes and races. Despite these women having vastly different pasts‚ there are some similarities in the role they play in their families and marriages and the way their power is important to the storylines of the two plays in relation to the other characters. Stella and Rose

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    Reality VS Fantasy In the play A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams‚ the motif of reality vs fantasy is used alot throughout the play. The fantasy part of this motif can be seen especially through Blanche‚ one of the characters. Blanche believes she is a young‚ beautiful and intelligent women but in reality she is not. Another fantasy seen in the play can be seen through the other characters because they hide from reality by acting as if some events did not happen. When the men would

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