A Streetcar Named Desire Women Essay

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    The Role of Women in America Around 1945

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    The Role of Women in America Around 1945 A Streetcar named Desire written by Tennessee William, show the reality of 1945, where women had a lower status than men thus implying a lower importance. There was a clear inequality between genders, perhaps as a function of the war and the need for everything to be “normal” again. Both the book A Streetcar named Desire, and the general society of 1945, show the same ideals of how a woman should be in order to fit into society. This is particularly the

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    Tennessee Williams’ 1947 drama, A Streetcar Named Desire, is a work of social realism which demonstrates the destructive impact of machismo on society in the late 1940s. In his raw representation of the human condition, Williams critiques the unrelenting gender roles which adversely affected so many members of his society. Although the drama is aimed at Williams’ society, as an audience member in the 21st century, Streetcar continues to be a confronting example of the past. Furthermore, the ongoing

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    fifteen narrators, As I Lay Dying, by William Faulkner and a scandalously invigorating play, A Streetcar Named Desire, by Tennessee Williams revolve around the notion that society’s standards and beliefs limit the happiness and freedom of women through the hands of men. Since patriarchal societies have disregarded women for centuries, literature contends to expose and enlighten readers to the rough situations women were forced into. While analyzing two lead female characters, Faulkner’s Addie Bundren and

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    Mississippi in 1911. A Streetcar Named Desire was set at around his time and it describes the decline of the Southern Belle named Blanche DuBois. The pathos found in Williams’s drama came from the playwright's own life. Alcoholism, depression, loneliness, desire, as well as insanity all played a huge part throughout William's lifetime, thus, incorporating these into his own life. Williams portrayed different social groups in his plays, and how they clash (such as the role of men and women, the urban and

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    The battle of the sexes has been going on for a millennium. The way that men and women view everything from love to children to career choices is strikingly different. Today, men and women seem to be much more in sync with these views. However, in the post-World War II era of A Streetcar Named Desire and Their Eyes Were Watching God, they are very different. Although both works of literature focus on the theme of desire, the authors deal with this topic quite differently. For example, Blanche continues

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    situation at all, “It was just a wrong marriage,” Williams later wrote. The Williams family situation helped with the playwright’s art. Throughout this essay, I will look back on Tennessee Williams life as well as one of his most known plays A Streetcar Named Desire. Williams enrolled at the University of Missouri in 1929 and there he studied Journalism. Sad to say Tennessee was withdrawn from college when his father got word of his girlfriend attending the same University. He returned home and became

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    The plays, A Streetcar Named Desire and A View from the Bridge, focus on the theme of domination of the female characters through the writer’s habit of literacy techniques such as imagery and realism to add the typical tragedy that follows in both plays – where the main character dies at the end and each playwright uses their own method to manipulate their point of view or opinion of the play’s plot to the audience members. In Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, its form of a Southern Gothic enables

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    Alcoholism's in "A Streetcar Named Desire" There is a great deal of alcoholism in the play. Blanche DuBois drinks often and drinks in excess. Alcohol abuse further distinguishes Blanche's character because in the 1940s, it was atypical for women to drink so much, and even more rare for women to be so publically alcoholic as Blanche. Those behaviors were stereotypically reserved for women. Blanche is very much aware of her problems and her social isolation. She uses her alcoholism as a way to escape

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    Have you seen the plays Skin of Our Teeth, Home of the Brave, All My Sons, or Lost in the Stars? Probably not. Why is it that today, it is still common to hear references to Stanley’s “STELL-LAHHHHH” in a Streetcar Named Desire, while few other plays of the 1940s remain relevant? First, Streetcar dared to delve into sensitive social topics, from mental illness to homosexuality to addiction, and even mortality. Tennessee Williams’ story of a young couple, Stanley and Stella, whose seemingly happy marriage

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    ‘Top Girls’ and ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ are written in ways that explore the issues surrounding gender equality and gender differences. Churchill explores the ideas of a feminist utopia where the men and women live in separate spheres which are prescribed to suit the stereotypical roles of the genders. For example at this time power dressing was a real strategy used by the new breed of feminists struggling for identity in society. We learn about the relationship between women and working. However

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