Zusammenfassung der Ressource
A Streetcar Named Desire
- Themes
- Sexual Desire
- Cigarette motif
- 'May I have a drag of your cig'
- 'Throws off her robe and slips
into a flowered print dress'
- 'I was fishing for a compliment, Stanley'
- '[Slowly] Lay...her cards on the table'
- New Social Order
- The destruction of Belle Reve
- 'I'm not in anything I
want to get out of'
- Power
- Violence
- 'Ape-like'
- 'he heaves the package at her'
- 'bellowing'
- Gender
- 'The hot trumpet
and drums...sound
loudly'
- 'He smashed all the light
bulbs with the heel of my
slipper!'
- 'I like an artist who paints in strong
bold colours, primary colours. I don't
like pinks and creams'
- 'She didn't say nothing. That shut her
up like a clam'
- Fate
- Mortality
- 'Incongruous to her setting'
- 'I am the king around here'
- Morality
- 'You're not clean enough to bring
in the house with my own
mother'
- Fantasy vs.
Reality
- Fantasy
- 'I don't want realism...I
want magic'
- 'We are going to pretend that we
are sitting in a little artist's cafe
on the left bank in Paris'
- 'I stayed at a hotel
called the Tarantula
Arms'
- Shep
Huntleigh
- 'ghoul-haunted
woodland of Weir'
- Reality
- 'The headlight of the locomotive
glares into the room as it
thunders past'
- 'Ha-ha! Do you hear me?
Ha-ha-ha!'
- Survival
- Dependency
- 'I have always depended
on the kindness of
strangers'
- 'I can hardly stand it when he's
away for a night'
- 'Your fix is worse than mine'
- Lyricism vs Brutality
- Lyricism
- 'I can't imagine a witch of a
woman casting her spell
over you'
- 'Kiefaber, Stanley
and Shaw have tied
an old tin can to
the tale of the kite'
- 'Virgo is the Virgin'
- 'A young prince out
of the Arabian
Nights'
- Brutality
- [Booming]: Let's cut the re-bop!
- 'She sprays herself with her
atomizer; then playfully sprays
him with it...He slams it on the
dresser.
- 'No ifs, no buts or
and's'
- Human Nature
- Context
- Williams' life
- His hypermasculine Boyfriend Pancho
- Labotomised and
Schizophrenic sister Rose'
- Alcoholic father. 'A raging
drunkard'
- Called 'Miss Nancy' by his
father because he never
accepted his sexuality
- 'Terrific crush on the female
members of my family'
- Homosexual man
- New America
- Ubermensch (Nietzsche)-the
superior man.
- The collapse of the Old
South built upon slavery
and the aristocracy.
- The influx of the working
class immigrants to the
South
- After WWII, the USA was in a
better economic position than
any other country.
- “America has only three cities:
New York, San Francisco, and
New Orleans. Everywhere else is
Cleveland.”
- Tragedy
- Amor Fati (Nietzsche)--the ability
to accept one's past in order to
have a meaningful future
- Classical
- Unities of time, space and action
- Hamartia
- Inexorablilty comes
from harmatia
- Modern
- The life of the common man
- 'The underlying struggle is that of the
individual attempting to gain his 'rightful'
position in society' Arthur Miller
- Inexorability comes from the
society in which we live in
- Plastic Theatre
- Costume
- 'white clothes'
- 'fluffy bodice'
- 'necklace and earrings of pearl'
- 'rhinestone tiara'
- 'blue denim work clothes'
- 'roughly dressed'
- 'solid blues, a purple, a
red and white check, a
light green'
- 'red satin robe'
- Lighting
- 'A light goes on behind
the blind turning it blue'
- 'The surrounding areas dim out as the
interior is lighted'
- Paper Lantern
- Music
- Blue Piano
- Hot Trumpets
- Varsouviana Polka
- Loud Drums
- Staging
- 'the walls have become transparent'
- 'lurid reflections'
- 'she closes the drapes
between the rooms'