1. Since the Wingfield family was a typical American family, Amanda didnt allow her to get a job, since only men were allowed to work.
2.Yes because the playwrighter takes his time and allows us to visualize the setting in order for it to be descrpitive and imagine it in our mind, giving the purpose of the play.
3. Yes because a typical American family has men work, as Tom does and women in search of finding rich men, as Amanda does for Laura.
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Friday, April 6, 2012
The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams (Authors Argument)
1. Précis
In Tennessee Williams’ play The Glass Menagerie, he exposes the readers the struggles and problems of an American family and how they all have to face them individually and try to overcome them as a whole. The author first begins by introducing the obsession Amanda has with herself and ensuring her daughter Laura has a gentlemen caller like she did herself through symbolism he then creates an image in the readers mind by using imagery to carefully describe her Glass Menagerie. To conclude he manipulates the unicorn to compare and correlate Laura with itself to represent their personalities and their different things that make both of them unique. His purpose is to portray that all families encounter struggles throughout their life but escape and anger isn’t the correct way to deal with hardships. He seems to have a family audience in mind because they can find answers and try to overcome situations if they stand as a family.
2. Vocabulary
Murky: Dark and gloomy, esp. due to thick mist.
Latticework: Interlacing strips of wood, metal, or other material forming a lattice
Mastication: chew: biting and grinding food in your mouth so it becomes soft enough to swallow
Serial: A story or play appearing in regular installments on television or radio or in a magazine or newspaper.
Gallantly: in a gallant manner
Flounce: to walk emphatically
Portiere: a heavy curtain across a doorway
3. Tone: disappointing, remorseful and ashamed
4. Rhetorical Strategies
· Imagery: “Laura is seated in the delicate ivory chair at the small claw foot table. She wears a dress of soft violet material…”(11)
· Allusion: “On those occasions they call me-El Diablo! Oh, I could tell you many things to make you sleepless.” (24)
· Allegory: “Go to the moon-you selfish dreamer!”(96)
· Hyperbole: “For nowadays the world is lit by lighting!”(97)
· Symbolism: "They're common as-weeds, but-you-well, you're Blue Roses!" (87)
5. Amanda, Laura and Tom speak about Laura having a disability, what exactly is it?
Would the play still be considered a play, if he would have been less descriptive throughout the dialogue?
The Wingfield family represents a traditional American family, in where a woman cannot succeed without a husband, in society now, this is possible. What do you think held the women back in the days?
6. “I turned around and look into her eyes. Oh Laura, Laura, I tried to leave you behind me, but I am more faithful than I intended to be!” (97)
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