Duty and Desire People could not live without desires for their life. To have a happy life‚ first of all it has to be desired. There is another aspect of life that opposite desire‚ duty. Both of them create life. Jasmine is the main character of the same name novel of Bharati Mukherjee who struggle about what she should act to‚ desire or duty. She was born in a very traditional culture that supports duty while she really want to live a life that she can choose. The story begins with the appearance
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flames I can Aeneas please’ (Wharton‚ A Paraphrase on the last Speech of Dido in Virgil’s Aeneis). Discuss the representation of sexual desire in two of your module text. There is no denying we all have sexual urges and desires. We also have gender typical views on the desire of both sexes. In this essay I am going to look at the representation of sexual desire within the digressional world of Tristram Shandy and within the Sexual Difference poetry‚ to see how sexuality is depicted as well as
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Sometimes the people in which others associate themselves with are the ones who restrict them from their dreams.In "A streetcar named Desire"‚ the two main opposing characters are Blanche and Stanely as the desires they want can’t exist with each other’s company. The fake world that Blanche has fabricated with all her compulsive lies can only subsist in her mind if it’s reassured by the belief of it all from those around her.Blanche wants the artificial reality she has created in her mind to
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The Idea of Bodily Desire Socrates‚ in Plato’s work "Symposium"‚ introduces the ladder of love through his conversation with the God-like figure‚ Diotima. The more knowledge about love one gains‚ the higher they climb and the less they focus on physical beauty. After Socrates has explained these concepts‚ Alcibiades steps in. He is confused because he himself is in love with philosophy‚ but he is also lost in bodily desire. According to the ideology of Socrates as expressed in Plato’s work "Symposium"
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Summary: An analysis of some of the many symbols found in "A Streetcar Named Desire" by Tennessee Williams‚ with the help of psychoanalytical theory. Williams’ expert use of these symbols helped him to convey the meaning of many characteristics of the protagonists in the play. It is very debatable nowadays how much psychology can influence an author or how much the author’s psychological features can influence his work. The creation of a character demands different kinds of information and the
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differences are due to physical and physiological differences. Stanley‚ the protagonist in A Streetcar Named Desire‚ is a aggressive and brutal man he represents the males of American society during this time period‚ he demonstrates the desire to have absolute control of his household‚ including his wife. He is referred to as "bestial" and is animalistic in his behavior and his desires. Even in the stage directions you can see that he is a powerful depiction of all that is male‚ magnifying certain
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Gender Roles in A Streetcar Named Desire Throughout history empowerment and marginalization has primarily been based on gender. In the play A Streetcar Named Desire‚ this idea of empowerment is strongly flaunted. Tennessee Williams’ characters‚ primarily Stanley‚ Blanche‚ Mitch‚ and Stella‚ conform the expected roles of men and women at the time. Although World War Two temporarily allowed women a place in the work force‚ they were dismissed from such empowerment when the war came to a close.
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Feminist reading: The play A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams was written in the late in the late 1940’s in New Orleans‚ Louisiana. In literature‚ the patriarchy is said to oppress all women and most men. This can be seen as true during the journey of characters such as Blanche‚ Stella‚ and Mitch. On the other hand‚ the text also conveys how the patriarchy can empower men‚ through the representation of the character of Stanley. In the play‚ Stella can be seen as the usual oppression
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this critical essay‚ “Repetition‚ race‚ and desire in The Great Gatsby” written by Adam Meehan‚ states that we should look at Gatsby through a lens of cognitive landmarks that are identified in the novel. With psychological criticism‚ Meehan applies modern psychological principles of Lacan to the study of literature and explains how symbols in the literature reflect Gatsby’s desires and ties to his surrounding characters. Meehan points out Gatsby’s desire regarding Lacan’s “fundamental fantasy.” Daisy
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exploits the expressionistic uses of space in the drama‚ attempting to represent desire from the outside‚ that is‚ in its formal challenge to realistic stability and closure‚ and in its exposure to risk. Loosening both stage and verbal languages from their implicit desire for closure and containment‚ Streetcar exposes the danger and the violence of this desire‚ which is always the desire for the end of desire. Writing in a period when U.S. drama was becoming disillusioned with realism‚ Williams
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