I really enjoyed the play it was inspirational in an indirect way. Each of the characters depicted all to well some aspect of society, then as well as now. Though the conclusion wasn’t a fairy tail, it was satisfying because it gave the more realistic event.
In the play The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams (copyright 1945) the characters depict a broken family’s obstacles as they realize they are growing apart. The play begins with a scene that sums up a grand theme if the play; the mother’s desire to sculpt her children Laura and Tom into who she wants them to be. Next the play travels into the reason the family is so broken using asides to the audience to tell the story of their past. A monologue is used by Laura’s character to help coheres her brother into staying. In the closing events it is clear that the Mother is upset with her daughters fragile state in contrast with her own by using harsh language toward her daughter. The play had a revolutionary tone because of the themes presented by the author in such a ground breaking way as if the characters actions were the beginning of a shift in society. Most directly this play is geared toward those who are forcing the people they love to conform to their societal beliefs.
Vocabulary
Portieres(n) – a curtain hung over a door way
Patronage(n)- a person who gives financial or other support to a person, organization, or activity
Archetype(n)- a very typical; example of a certain person or thing
Sublimations(n)- to divert or to modify into a culturally higher or socially more acceptable activity
Serialized(v)- publish or broadcast in regular installments.
Rhetorical strategies
Aside- “ Across the alley from us was the Paradise Dance Hall.” (57)
Simile- “You’re eloquent as an oyster.”(65)
Dialogue-“Don’t say peculiar.” “Face the facts, she is.”(66)
Musical Interruption” The sound of the violin rises and the stage dims out “(67)
Monologue-“Yes movies look at them…All of those glamorous people having adventures”(79)
What is the purpose of Jim having a fiancé yet swooning Laura
What is the purpose of Jim having a fiancé yet swooning Laura
Does the play allude to society taking advantage if those who are handicapped or different?
Why does Williams end the story with all of the problems unresolved?