Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. A Streetcar Named Desire. Stanley Kowalski. Audience members may well see Stanley as an egalitarian hero at the play’s start. He is loyal to his friends and passionate to his wife. Stanley possesses an animalistic physical vigor that is evident in his love of work, of fighting, and of sex. His family is from Poland, and several times he ...

  2. Stanley Kowalski is a working-class man who. provides for his wife and unborn child. He owns a small apartment, sufficient for his wife and unborn and has a stable day job. He strongly asserts that everything he provides for and owns is his. He is offended when Blanche calls him a Polack and states he is Polish.

    • 1MB
    • 19
  3. Stanley and His Romantic Relationship With Stella. Stanley sees his sexual relationship with his wife to be one of the most important aspects of their marriage. Although Stella and Stanley fight, their physical relationship is the way that they make up and forgive each other. Stella herself realizes that their sex life helps them smooth out ...

  4. Stanley Kowalski lives in a basic, fundamental world which allows for no subtleties and no refinements. He is the man who likes to lay his cards on the table. He can understand no relationship between man and woman except a sexual one, where he sees the man's role as giving and taking pleasure from this relationship.

  5. Later that night, Stanley bellows “STELL-LAHHHHH!” into the night like a wounded beast calling for the return of his mate. Their reunion is also described in terms of animal noises. Stanley’s cruel abuse of his wife convinces the audience that genteel Blanche has her sister’s best interests in mind more than Stanley does.

  6. Stanley is not a likeable character. His crudeness offends the reader; however, it is the abuse of his wife that is most disgusting. He hits his pregnant wife which is beyond criminal in nature ...

  7. People also ask

  8. An actual Stanley Kowalski lived in St. Louis. He was born in 1893 or 1895, served in the U.S. Army in World War I, and died in 1933. He was a shoe-worker. For several years Tennessee Williams worked as a clerk at Continental Shoe in St. Louis. The article “In Search of Stanley Kowalski,” by Stephen Werner goes into detail about what can be ...

  1. People also search for