A Streetcar Named Desire Women Essay

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    representations of the women are shown to have changed dramatically, reflected through contrasting roles women take within the Traditional period of the 1940’s and the Contemporary Period of the 1980’s to the present. Tennessee Williams’ play “A Streetcar Named Desire”, explores the submissive and dependent roles of a women, while exploring how rebellion against societal norm can ostracise. Contrasted by John Lee Hancock’s biopic, “The Blind Side”, which juxtaposes these values by showing women in positions

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    Stella and Blanche in Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire    The two important female characters in the "poetic tragedy"(Adler 12), A Streetcar Named Desire, are Stella and Blanche. The most obvious comparison between Stella and Blanche is that they are sisters, but this blood relationship suggests other similarities between the two women. They are both part of the final generation of a once aristocratic but now moribund family. Both manifest a great deal of culture and sensitivity

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    injustices. Tennessee Williams protests the treatment of women in traditional relationships through characterization and motifs in his drama A Streetcar Named Desire. Women are mistreated in relationships everywhere and Williams demonstrates this in his drama through characterization. In A Streetcar Named Desire, Williams uses characterization to protest the treatment of women in relationships. Williams demonstrates the mistreatment of women in relationships through the characterization of Blanche

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    during the 50’s. The novel, A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams and One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Milos Forman expresses the simmering discontent in the 1950’s. In the 1950’s, the inequality of gender conflicted women in the United States. A woman’s goal in life was to get married, have children, and to primarily take care of the house. An article by Christina Catalano called Shaping the American Woman: Feminism and Advertising in the 1950’s states that women were known for being, “.

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    In the beginning of the play A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams, Blanche first arrives from Laurel Missouri and immediately becomes the antagonist. As the play goes on Stanley starts to go against Blanche. At the end of the play Blanche becomes the victim. In the end, Stanley sent Blanche off to a mental asylum. This plays demonstrates domestic violence. In the beginning of the play A Streetcar Named Desire, Tennessee Williams shows how society accepted it and ignored it.Stanley, one

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    Looking back upon civil rights, women 's campaign for suffrage and equal standing in society shines as one of the most important movements in US history. The literature of this time reflects the ideals from the movement. The 1890s marked the beginning of the Progressive Era; a period dictated by the emergence of women from all levels of society entering the public sphere and becoming self advocates. In 1892, Charlotte Perkins Gilman authored The Yellow Wallpaper, a piece that symbolically represented

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    Feminism taken to Extremes in A Streetcar Named Misogyny                As women's studies programs have proliferated throughout American universities, feminist "re-readings" of certain classic authors have provided us with the most nonsensical interpretations of these authors' texts. A case in point is that of Kathleen Margaret Lant's interpretation of Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire in her essay entitled "A Streetcar Named Misogyny." Throughout the essay, she continually misreads

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    Martin Luther King once said “There is no life to be found in violence.” When Martin Luther King spoke these words he meant that violence can’t solve anything and it only causes more problems. These words can be applied to the play A Streetcar named Desire written by Tennessee Williams. Tennessee Williams’ play contains many important themes that can relate to real life situations. One of the most important themes in the play is the addiction of alcohol can increase instances of domestic abuse in

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    A Streetcar Named Desire and “Water” examine the world and how people handle the harsh reality of things. A Streetcar Named Desire follows Blanche Dubois, a southern belle forced out into a cold world, who moves in with her sister Stella and her abusive husband Stanley Kowalski. Blanche inevitably is at odds with Stanley, who she views as common filth and primal. Stanley determined to not allow Blanche steal Stella from him and exact revenge he pulls up dirt on her and ruins her chances with Mitch

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    II. A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) by Tennessee Williams 1) Origins: a) There are many autobiographical elements in Williams’ play. b) When the play came out, the country had just emerged from the war after struggling through the Great Depression of 1930's, and suddenly the national spotlight concentrated on the lower and middle classes as the true supporters of the heroic American spirit. 2) Title: a) The title of the play is significant as it links both the concrete with the abstract; the streetcar

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