In scene four of “ A Streetcar Named Desire” Blanche attempts to convince Stella that she can get out of her situation with Stanley, but Stella insists she is not in anything she wished to get out of. Stella makes it clear that she is happy about her relationship with Stanley through their sexual chemistry by saying “ But there are things that happen between a man and a woman in the dark”. Stella believes that there is nothing wrong and she can’t understand why Blanche is so frantic. Blanche tries to persuade Stella that her situation with Stanley is just desire by arguing, “ What you are talking about is brutal desire- just- Desire!- the name of that rattle-trap streetcar that bangs through the Quarter, up one old narrow street and down another…”…
Despite Buck having an answer for Mencken’s question, their thoughts on why the people live in the houses are different. Mencken believes that the people of Westmoreland County truly like their “uremic yellow” houses. However, Buck thinks that the people won’t live in these houses forever; they’re just “a temporary necessity”. Buck emphasizes that the “American pattern”, is “patternless”, and that individualism is ultimately leading to…
On the surface, “Bartleby, the Scrivener” and “A Street Car Named Desire” are two literary works that have little in common. “Bartleby, the Scrivener” is about a Wall Street worker that gradually reduces the amount of work he does after his initial hiring, while “A Street Car Named Desire” is about a newly married couple, Stanley and Stella Kowalski, in New Orleans that have lives interrupted by Stella’s sister, Blanche DuBois. However, both texts share a similar theme, the struggle to gain power. Bartleby, the narrator (Bartleby’s boss), Blanche DuBois, and Stanley Kowalski in particular fight for power throughout both texts.…
“I’m the most terrific liar you ever saw in your life. It’s awful.” This quote comes from Holden Caulfield, the protagonist of the award winning novel, The Catcher in the Rye. Many people claim to relate to Holden Caulfield because of how genuine he is with the reader. In spite of that, critics have continuously challenged the notion that Holden was a reliable narrator. Throughout the story Holden Caulfield demonstrates that he is not a reliable character because he is quick to lie, is hypocritical, and is mentally unstable.…
A Streetcar Named Desire written by Tennessee Williams is a play about a southern lady named Blanche from Mississippi visiting her sister Stella, who is married to Stanley and currently living in Elysian Fields, New Orleans. Blanche arrives in Elysian Fields, and throughout her entire stay with Stella and Stanley, there is tension and conflict occurring in Stella’s house. Even though Blanche and Stella were brought up in the South under wealthy conditions, the conflict is mainly caused by Blanche’s dislike of Stanley because, as a blue-collar worker, Stanley's status is lower than the DuBois’. In another aspect, Stanley’s conflict is caused by him being suspicious of Blanche since her arrival. Blanche explains to Stella that…
Everyone wants to live a life they do not have. Some people want to be rich, while others want to travel the world and never work a day in their lives. In order to live the lives they do not have, many people create their own fantasies. Tennessee Williams’ Streetcar Named Desire depicts Blanche and Stella’s lives as lies, while revealing how they do not wish to face their own realities, for they will never to able to live the life they have always hoped for.…
By examining Stella's ineptitude to recognize Stanley’s true character, Blanche’s solace in her own fantasy, and contrasting them with Stanley’s hard set realistic view of life, Tennessee William reveals the only way to shield themselves from the horrors of reality is to live life in one’s own fantasy.…
Steinbeck uses setting to further develop Crooks’ character. He lives in the harness room therefore it is his home.…
Everyone wants to be happy. Some people will travel across the sea and leave their home and family in search for happiness. They will throw away everything they have in order to attain something that, during the moment, seems like the perfect solution to all of their questions. Jay Gatsby and Blanche Dubois in The Great Gatsby and A Streetcar Named Desire, respectfully, give away everything they have in order to attain what they believe to be the ultimate form of happiness: the American Dream…
The Californian's Tale is about a lone wanderer who stumbles into a strange little town somewhere in California. He realizes that this town is almost deserted with very few residents in the area. He stumbles into a house, in which a man welcomes him in as a guest and invites him to stay for a few days. The house is described as very beautiful and decorated, which the owner's wife had decorated. The owner of the house is very fond and speaks highly of his wife, he tells the visitor that she is on vacation for a while. Eager to introduce his wife, the owner insists the visitor wait until an upcoming Saturday which is when his wife would come home. The visitor decides to stay and meet the wife of the house owner. On Saturday, a big welcome back party takes place to welcome the wife back from vacation and the whole town gets together. Little does the visitor know that the man's wife has been dead for nineteen years already, and that the man is mentally unstable. Every year, the husband gets in a mind state that believes his wife is coming home from vacation and the whole town throws a party to help him believe his wife is still alive. This is because the man cannot cope with the loss of his wife and refuses to believe she is dead, so the whole town helps him with his dilemma every year.…
1). This story takes place in London, England. The time is winter and it starts the day before Christmas, also known as Christmas Eve. The settings of the book include Scrooge’s Counting House, Scrooge’s Home, Bob Cratchit’s home, assorted places throughout Scrooges childhood like the schoolhouse and the Fizziwig’s place where Scrooge was an apprentice, this is where a Christmas party took place and he met the one love of his life. Then it skips to Scrooge’s love of his life when she is married and they speaks about Scrooge and how he is now in a world of his money. Also it shows the exchange, homeless people under a bridge, and a cemetery.…
Here Georgette explains to Frances how she doesn’t like Paris for it is too expensive. Since this book is placed in the 1920’s, everywhere at this time was expensive because of WWI…
While living in New York in her earliest years, Susan Cheever is an only child, living in a two-bedroom apartment near the Queensborough Bridge. In attempt to explain the greatness of New York she writes on page 8, line 36: ‘’The city in those years just after the war was a romantic place, a place of dreams and the beginnings of prosperity for people like my young parents’’ showing that already at a young age she felt a platonic love for the city in which she lived. She got infatuated by the idea of New York at such a young age, that she seemed to have created an idea, of which being that nothing could compare to New York. With these ideals she moved to the suburbs with her parents, where she was living her parents’ dream of the white picket-fenced house, gaining a younger brother and a dog, in Westchester. Already knowing what she thought was best, she puts the two different ways of living in perspective through personal experience:…
At the beginning of the short story we get an idea of where Tucker is in his life. Tucker recently married at forty two after having been one of the last bachelors in his district to marry shortly after his mother had passed away. Before marriage Tucker had done for himself and lived in “traditional rural simplicity rather than poverty”. His financial priorities were focused on things for the farm which were “natural expenses of life”. So it made his life very unsettled becoming newly married when his wife started to spend money. Tucker found her purchases unjustifiable. Quote: “to buy a new lampshade or replace the kitchen lino for reason of colour co-ordination would no more enter his head than to dine at the Victor Hugo restaurant in town when he had food in his own home. A four and half…
As a baby, she lived in the city of New York. However, her family chose to mover to the suburbs a bit later on in her life. Which she did not like. The big city was a place, more fitting for her. Therefore, as she grew older and had children of her own, she chose to raise them in the big city. She had a better feeling of living in the big city rather than living in the suburbs. Susan Cheever tells us of how the city and the countryside are two opposite places to live. She describes the life in the city as a clean and safe place. While her view of living on the countryside is rough and unsafe.…