Kovalsky and Dubois's "Different Values of Tramway" named Tennessee Williams as a desire for a tram, this is a drama based on a conflict culture. Blanche and Stanley, the main opponents of this drama, are proposed to protect and preserve very different ideas, so their incompatibility is a repeated theme in stories. Indeed, as conflicting views already exacerbate the tension brewed in the Kowalski family, these different values and principles are the ultimate cause of conflict.
A tram called Desire was written by Tennessee Williams in the late 1940s. The play was held in New Orleans, Louisiana. A tram called Desire is written about the tragedy of the school teacher Blanche Dubois in Mississippi. He will go to New Orleans to visit her sister and brother-in-law Stella and Stanley Kowalski. Through the play, Williams showed the lifetime of Blanche Dubois, her wish for a young boy, and the destruction of Stanley Kowalski. In this play there is a clear difference between the two.
Kovalsky and Dubois's "Different Values of Tramway" named Tennessee Williams as a desire for a tram, this is a drama based on a conflict culture. Blanche and Stanley, the main opponents of this drama, are proposed to protect and preserve very different ideas, so their incompatibility is a repeated theme in stories. In fact, these different values and principles are the ultimate cause of conflict.
Iain Banks novel The Wasp Factory and Tennessee Williams' s play "Desire Streetcar" is communicating this behavior. In "Desire Streetcar", the theme of violence at Stanley Kowalski is frequently seen. Stanley is an angry person full of attributes of the animal to the reader. The difference between Stanley and ordinary people is that Stanley Dubois (Stanley's wife) explained to Stister that Stanley is "a different species".
In Tennessee Williams' s "Desire Streetcar", Stanley Kowalski showed his barbaric behavior in various ways. This drama is about Blanche Dubois' visit to Ilysia Fields, meeting her sister's barbaric and arrogant husband Stanley, and why Blanche really came to her sister's addiction. Truth Stanley Kowalski is a very barbaric person. Stanley's atrocities were demonstrated in several places during the "desert tram". For example, his first atrocities were revealed at the poker knight when he was angrily toss the radio outside the window. When he defeated his wife Stella, he showed another example of his barbaric behavior. Finally, when he raped Blanche and his wife worked in a hospital, his arrogance and malicious behavior were the most obvious.