2015년 11월 10일 화요일

Formal Essay #1 - Rewrites


HyeonSeon Choi

Prof. Kyle Brebner

IERW (04)

7 October 2015

A Comparison of Two Characters in A Streetcar Named Desire

                      A Streetcar Named Desire is a 1947 play written by American playwright Tennessee Williams, who received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1948. This play is set in a decaying residential street in New Orleans, a port city in the south of the United States. The play revolves around the story of how a woman named Blanche Dubois from the southern U.S. begins to live with her sister, Stella Kowalski, and her husband, Stanley Kowalski. Mitch who is Stanley’s friend is interested in Blanche but Stanley discloses her promiscuous past and rapes her. Then Blanche is committed to a mental hospital. In this story, Stanley and Mitch have similarities in attitude of treating woman and view of a physical relationship and differences in attitude of conversation with Blanche and experience of love.

The differences of character between Stanley and Mitch are conflicting attitude of conversation with Blanche and gap in experiences of love. At first, Stanley started talking to Blanche with sly jokes. He even asks her what he shouldn’t. Blanche had a husband before but he died in the past. It isn’t proper debate etiquette that he exposed her private past. It can imply that Stanley and Blanche will oppose each other. However, Mitch has good manners and this reveals when he also speaks to Blanche. He always talks to her in a formal way. So, he first brought up his private story that his lover was dead to bond with her who has the same pain. “And if God choose, I shall but love thee better-after-death!”; It is the inscription on his cigarette case, which his girl died gave him. While Stanley reveals her past and hurts her, Mitch first talks about his pain so that she doesn’t get hurt and sympathize with him.

Secondly, their experiences of love are different from each other. Stanley is a very rough and “manly” man while Mitch is a well-mannered gentleman. So, Stanley is all clued up to woman and love. But in the case of Mitch, since he had lost his girl he never met other woman. Also he considers the relationship between men and women sincerely than Stanley. Therefore Mitch is more pure than Stanley in terms of experiences in love.

On the other hand, the similarities of their character are the dominant way to treat woman and view of a physical relationship. First of all, they are similar to the patriarchal personality. That can readily be understood considering the background of the play, America in the 1940s. Stanley looks so patriarchal in terms of using force against his wife and his mention of Napoleonic code. “In the state of Louisiana we have the Napoleonic code according to which what belongs to the wife belongs to the husband and vice versa. For instance if I had a piece of property, or you had a piece of property-” Stanley says. It means that Blanche family’s property is also his property. That is very patriarchal and coercive thinking. Mitch seemed to be a gentleman like people of the South in the beginning. However, when he knew Blanche’s past life in Laurel his attitude changed abruptly and he tried to rape her. Blanche led a fast way of living and slept around in Laurel. So, Mitch changed his attitude toward her.

This action of Mitch also shows his idea of a physical relationship. His perspective on woman is divided into two types: a virgin and not a virgin. He says to Blanche “You’re not clean enough to bring in the house with my mother.” For him, a woman who isn’t clean and pure is just a subject for the satisfaction of sexual desires. The case is no different in Stanley. Every woman can be the subject of a physical relationship for him.

In A Streetcar Named Desire, there are commonalities and differences between Stanley and Mitch. They are similar in opinion of dominant behavior to treat woman and a physical relationship. However, they are dissimilar to way of talking to Blanche and disparity of love experiences. What if all men were like Stanley these days? Then all women have to suffer and struggle in desperate situation. Two characters have features of people in the 1940s. So, their personality is so conservative. If A Streetcar Named Desire remakes in modern version it will be a big hit like the past version.

댓글 3개:

  1. "A Streetcar Named Desire" is my favorite play. So I watched a movie, read a book, and watched a play ! Even though the play describes blanche as a mental. I am feeling really sad for blanche. I think she was a victim of the conservative society.

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  2. You made some good improvements and added some nice details and quotes from the play. The thesis statement is much stronger, but remember to list the key points in the same order they will be discussed in the body paragraphs. You added a good prediction to the conclusion as well. Good job!

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  3. I am interested in feminism, so I should watch this play in movie. Also, reading your post, I felt so sad about blanche and the reality at that time.

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