Alcohol use in various forms Alcohol has many different physical properties. Along with F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby" and Tennessee Williams's "Desire Streetcar" alcohol is a very impressive and symbolic role. For example, alcohol is displayed in two kinds of text, spending social and pleasant time and possibly causing violence. Therefore, the author tries to use alcohol in various ways to convey moral deterioration of society.
"Great Gatsby" and "Tramway of desire" which were physically and mentally invulnerable from the restraints of World War I and World War II were set up in the postwar era. I was excited. This ignited the hope that many Americans would live a more fulfilling and restrictive life. But in this newly acquired freedom, we must be aware that many people, such as gangbangs, gambling and other illegal acts, have also found the happiness seen in sin.
Women of "Great Gatsby" and "Desire Streetcars" are often affected and get married, and the character and character of women are determined by the living conditions of women and work environments. In "The Great Gatsby" and "Tramway called Desire", Daisy and Blanche suffered from spirituality and morality declining due to male behavior and behavior of life. - Throughout history women have to overcome many setbacks. They experienced numerous abuses in changing how women dress, act, and participate in activities outside the home. In the 1920s, the role of women changed dramatically. This change brings women new freedoms in labor, family, and fashion. Women who took advantage of new opportunities and independence in the 1920s are said to have been robbed
Clay County Free Press critic Jonathan Briggs said in a tram called desire, "Blanc Dubois as a desire is somewhat unrealistic". Life "In the play of Tennessee Williams" Desire Streetcar ", readers were introduced to the character Blanche Dubois. Blanche is Stella 's sister, she came to New Orleans to visit Stella and her husband Stanley. Stanley strongly dislikes Blanche and Chicago after their first meeting and soon began with Broadway. His victory of "Desire Streetcar" (1947) strengthened his reputation as a great playwright. The show won the Williams Drama Critics Award and his first Pulitzer Prize. The drama was created in the process of American drama from dramatic drama to dramatic naturalism. Williams used the role of Blanche Dubois to explain how the performance of the theater style is misleading. Blanche uses exaggerated sighs, unnecessary screams