A 26 year old woman kneels to the floor like a child and is playing with a glass bottle on the table in the living room. Laura is suffering from her humility considering the future for himself; isolated from the outside world, suffering from bad embarrassment and enthusiasm for getting good experience. Laura's lack of positive growth with other families is a trap for Tennessee Williams and he can only force the same despair in the "glass zoo" to produce despair as the final result.
"The Glass Zoo" The symbol of the zoo at Tennessee Williams's "Glass Zoo" explains three independent characters, their dreams and the harsh reality they face in the modern world. The glass zoo exposes their desperate struggle to escape the lost dream and reality of the southern family. The use of Williams' symbols adds depth to the drama. The glass zoo itself is a symbol of a broken life where Williams was representative of Amanda, Laura, Tom Wingfield, Tennessee Glass Zoo. Williams elaborately interprets the man's desire to escape from unpleasant emotions and physical condition. Whether he shows a young man trapped in the factory, he hates elderly single mothers, lament for the lives of South Americans, or is concerned that she spends her life alone Women and fear. His audience Williams showed us how his character treats all kinds of unpleasant behaviors.
By escaping from the "Glass Zoo" fantasy Tennessee Williams' s "Glass Zoo", the reader can understand a truly dysfunctional family. At first, their life seems unusual, but Amanda's urge to protect her single parent family seems to be as well known as the morning post (Presley 53). Winfield is a typical family and works hard to overcome difficulties. But their problem arises from the fact that they can not effectively communicate with each other. Instead of talking about the differences, they took desperate action. The despair of Wingfields makes them fancy in their minds, which in turn will be deceiving. Zuman