Selected Product: | A Streetcar Named Desire and Other Plays: "Sweet Bird of Youth"; "A Streetcar Named Desire"; "The Glass Menagerie" (Penguin Modern Classics) Paperback Edition: New edition Author: Tennessee Williams Publisher: Penguin Classics Release Date: February 2000 ISBN-10: 0141182563 ISBN-13: 9780141182568 List Price: £9.99 Average Customer Rating: | | York Notes on Tennessee Williams' "Streetcar Named Desire" (York Notes Advanced) ISBN-10: 0582784247 Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and Other Plays (Penguin Modern Classics) ISBN-10: 0141184353 Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Vintage classics) ISBN-10: 009928569X A Streetcar Named Desire [1951] ISBN-10: B000JJRBN6 Frankenstein: or, the Modern Prometheus: Or, the Modern Prometheus (Penguin Popular Classics) ISBN-10: 0140620303 |
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Set in 1950s New Orleans, the highly pretentious Miss Blanche Dubois visits her sister and brother-in-law, Stella and Stanley Kowalski. Blanche, "virtuous", sensitive and 'moth-like' is a cultured antithesis of Stanley with his overt sensuality and primal behaviour, providing the audience with a wonderful drama of emotions.
Williams cleverly unravels Blanche's shocking history through Stanley, whose determined investigations reveal her past mistakes from her inability to receive closure from her young husband's death. The delightful use of explicit and precise stage directions results in a fantastic array of tension-building music, dramatic irony and intricately inter-woven symbolism.
The eleven scenes span over a long period of time, condensing the play into major dramatic events which intensify the emotions of both the characters and the audience. This is futher affirmed by the small set - the tiny apartment bespeaks confinement, accentuating the emotional density and the power and menace of Stanley's physical presence.
As the loss of literature, language, music and culture (everything that Blanche epitomises) is replaced with desire and lust, Blanche slowly 'fades' into her illusions; unable to cope with a changing world and ultimately losing her grip on sanity altogether.
Peter Shaffer wrote of Williams: "He could not write a dull scene." I could not agree more; 'A Streetcar Named Desire' is rightfully one of the best pieces of modern American literature as it will undoubtably be remembered, discussed and enjoyed for years to come.
Emma Stimson, A-level student. | Moving stuff | Customer Rating: | I studied the play, 'A streetcar named Desire' for A level and found it to be devastatingly truthful about human nature. It shows the profound effect that desire and the need to feel desirable can have. One of the main characters, 'Stanley' is one of those men that women hate to love, yet feel instictively drawn to, he's strong, masculine and sexy, yet at the same time he is overly opinionated, violent and dominating. Not the kind of man you 'should' be attracted to, yet so many women find themselves in the position that they are! Why is this? Williams explores the complexities of issues such as this. Loved it! |
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