At that time, women were suppressed, and it was thought that they could do nothing other than childbirth and child rearing. Men treat their wives as wealth, not treating their wives as partners. Since women are not considered "being physically inclined to do scientifically" (Barnett), we are focusing on women's activities such as teaching, cooking, and raising families. It also forces women to focus on maintaining their own beauty. It is a good attribute that they are innate and can control themselves.
Written by Winfield, Tennessee Williams, the glass zoo is drawn as a distracting southern beauty trying to control her children's lives. In The Glass Menagerie, Amanda is a woman responsible for a small family, initially looks like a woman who care about the future of the child - before she becomes too arrogant, she starts to hinder the future of the child . Amanda is a single mother who can not master reality. Glass Menagerie is a memory drama.
"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 exquisitely 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.
Tennessee Williams, alienation of Glasszoo Life is a lonely alienation story, as Tennessee Williams communicates through his theatrical "glass zoo". Williams uses various symbols to isolate rollers from the world they want to belong to. . The symbolic nature of the theme hidden in the play gives meaning to the theme seen in the play. Individuals are unique in the world. - Isolation and alienation of Hester in "Red Letter" In Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Red Letter", Hester Prynne and Pastor Simsdale promised adultery. Accepted sins Because of their sins, children are born, mothers call pearls. Due to his own free will, Hester must face big punishment.