Title of article :
Torn Between the Real and the Illusion: Tennessee Williams Protagonists
Author/Authors :
Aldalabeeh ، Yousef A.N. - Al-al-Bayt University
Pages :
6
From page :
144
To page :
149
Abstract :
Tennessee Williams is regarded as one of the most famous and important American playwrights in the twentieth century. His writing career spanned more than fortyfive years, and his achievements have been recognized and appreciated by many critics and readers in the world. Williams literary work was also under many critical controversies. During his life, he was awarded two times  Pulitzer Prizes for his work A Streetcar Named Desire in 1947 and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof in 1955. He was also awarded New York Drama Critics Circle Award for The Glass Menagerie . His southern roots play an important role to shape the theme of his work where thematically attached to twentiethcentury southern fiction writers more than any other dramatist of his period. Williams concerned much with absconders and isolated people who were treated badly and trapped in their inappropriate circumstances, and this was the outcome of the impact of the social protest in the 1930s. His plays are concerned with large individual issues rather than the social issues that differentiate him from his contemporaries by the lyrical language he used too. The paper takes up the dialogue between the real and the illusion, especially in the way his protagonist relates to their social milieu.
Keywords :
Degenerate , sordid , fugitive , alienated , dialogic , real , illusion
Journal title :
International Journal Of Applied Linguistics And English Literature
Serial Year :
2016
Journal title :
International Journal Of Applied Linguistics And English Literature
Record number :
2459109
Link To Document :
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