"Collin 1, a music box, foreclosure, direction, letters, poetry, telegrams, newspapers, ratings, songs and even satellites (Colin 1), all of which are related to each other: desire of paper and trams Philip C. Kolin, I pointed out this metaphor in his essay "The Just Paper Moon". The existence of Tennessee Williams in a streetcar called "desire". Williams found that he used paper as a metaphor to explain the faults and desires of Blanche and Stanley. Collin felt this is a feature common to Williams' s work, but the main concern was a tram.
"Trams are called success" is an article by Tennessee Williams on the role of art and artists in society. It is usually included in the paper version of A Streetcar Named Desire. The version of this article first appeared in the New York Times on November 30, 1947. This is four days before the Street of Desire opens. Other versions of this article titled "Successful Disaster" are sometimes used as an introduction to Glass Zoo.
Tennessee Williams fantasy and fantasy is called "Desire Street Car" in Tennessee Williams 'Desire Street Car' exploring many important topics and problems in books. The theme of Williams' audience survey and exploration is fantasy and fantasy. - Tim Burton's "Big Fish" is a fantasy drama based on the story of a novel of the same name. This is a story of reconciliation between the dying father and son. The story develops around a collection of dead father and his son attempting to learn more about his father by organizing the stories he collected over the years.
The tram called desire is called Tennessee Williams tram, it is a terrible explanation of a woman's fall. Blanche Dubois, the protagonist of the story, was forced to move or "visit" with her sister in New Orleans. Through the script, Blanche tried to accept her reality and eventually tried to accept her fate. Blanche was misunderstood by Stella's actual husband Stanley and driven into madness. This drama depicts her journey to complete madness from the country of dreams. The drama also depicts many of the social norms of the day, the norm Tennessee Williams is trying to challenge.
There is a more compelling name, but I would like to pay attention to the most important name "Desire Streetcar". Because this is the title of the show. Blanche brought "a streetcar called desire" (Williams, a tram called desire 9) to the apartment in Kowalskis. This is highly convincing as the audience is increasingly discovering her past, and she treats Laurel as somehow a broken woman, but she still has her life elegant and deserved I think that I am a reliable, sincere woman. That's why she wants to live for her and find it in New Orleans