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Essay on Relationships in Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie

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Relationships in Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie Throughout the Glass Menagerie, Tennessee Williams concentrates a lot on family relationships. There are the Wingfields at the start of the play and they experience different interactions with each other: Tom and Amanda (son and mother), Amanda and Laura (mother and sister) and Laura and Tom (sister and brother). At the sixth scene of the play appears Jim and we see him interacting mostly with Laura. I will try …show more content…

In scene 3 the plot thickens, and we understand more what each character wants and what his/hers dreams are, in contrast to their reality.

"…obsession…image…gentleman caller…haunted…"

This is Tom's impression of Amanda's obsession over getting Laura a gentleman caller. This obsession makes him miserable and it irritates him. Also, as the narrator, he lets us the audience see the enormous significant Amanda is giving to this gentleman caller: we get the impression that he is more like a savior, something supernatural, when he actually doesn't even exist yet!

Tom is really into poetry and literature as he tells us in the beginning of the play, and as we saw in scene 1, Amanda is really against it. She finds out that he is reading D.H. Lawrence books and his shocking reputation causes Amanda's rejection of him and she tells Tom off. She tries to force him to stop reading this sort of books, and this just makes Tom even angrier: now his mother is interfering in his personal life. Amanda sees Tom's creative labor as a waste of the present, where he sees it as a work for the future.

"It seems unimportant to you, what I'm doing, what I want to do."

Tom tells his mother he has dreams, hopes and

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