The Glass Menagerie is a dramatic play about human nature, the conflict between illusion and reality. The struggle between the love of freedom and the love of family. If there is a signature character type that marks Tennessee Williams's dramatic work, it is undeniably that of the faded Southern belle. Amanda is a clear representative of this type; a faded belle from a prominent Southern family, who has received a traditional upbringing, but has suffered a reversal of economic and social fortune at some point in her life. Her relationships with men and her family are turbulent, and she staunchly defends the values of her past. Amanda is the play's most extroverted and theatrical character.
A recurrent theme running throughout the plays of Tennessee
Williams perhaps has its genesis in The Glass Menagerie: that familial happiness and unity may be eternally predestined for failure in the face of overpowering odds that are manifested in the form of misunderstanding and miscommunication between the one entity that should above all others be expected to strive toward interpersonal
understanding.