"Sex and Street Car" in Stanley's Character "Tennessee Williams's" Desire Street Car "is about the fact that Blanche Dubois made a visit to Irishi Fields and that a brutal husband Stanley Kovar went with his sister It is. A classical drama that thatsky welcomes. Stanley Kowalski is a very savage person and always feels better than others. His barbarous behavior in the play made her reader's mouth worse. The atrocities of Stanley Kowalski have obvious examples in several places in the game: First, the poker knight radio series; then, when he broke his wife Stella, and finally raped Blanche.
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 the play of Tennessee Williams "Desire Streetcar", the reader was introduced to the character Stanley Kowalski. He is faithful to his friends, seems to take care of his wife, but he is actually against it. As the play rolls over, Williams uses three ways to make it easier for the reader to understand who Stanley Kowalski is. Or practice; thirdly, what other stranam's personality says. Williams introduced Stanley to readers shortly after introducing Stilly in the play. He is medium height, about 5 feet 8 inches, and has a very compact and powerful structure. Stanley enjoys simple things in life like women. According to Williams, from the very young age, Stanley 's life center was always feminine pleasure. Branch his other interests from this complete and fulfilling center: poker, bowling, cars, rough humor and beer