Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Williams, Tennessee (Vol. 30) - Joseph Wood Krutch
Williams, Tennessee (Vol. 30) - Joseph Wood Krutch
JOSEPH WOOD KRUTCH
Tennessee Williams grew up in the South. Like so many other Southern writers, the existence of a decayed aristocracy was one of the inescapable facts of the society with which he was most familiar. That representatives of such a decayed aristocracy should appear in his plays may mean no more than that they were part of his experience. Nevertheless it seems to be obvious that his persistent concern with them does have a greater significance. These helpless survivors from the past, feeble and pathetic clingers to a dead tradition, take on the importance of symbols. They are not accidental facts; they mean something.
Upon the answer to the question "What do they mean? Of what are they symbols?" depends the whole meaning of the plays so far as our own special theme is concerned. Let us consider it in connection with A Streetcar Named Desire. (pp. 126-27)
Blanche, the nymphomaniac, is horrified by what some would call her sister's...
[The entire page is 859 words long]
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- Introduction
- Howard Barnes
- Richard Watts, Jr.
- Louis Kronenberger
- Wolcott Gibbs
- Kappo Phelan
- Joseph Wood Krutch
- John Mason Brown
- Rosamond Gilder
- Harry Taylor
- Harold Clurman
- George Jean Nathan
- W. David Sievers
- Eric Bentley
- Joseph Wood Krutch
- Kenneth Tynan
- John Gassner
- C. N. Stavrou
- Winifred L. Dusenbury
- Marion Magid
- Robert B. Heilman
- R. H. Gardner
- Leonard Berkman
- Martin Gottfried
- Harold Clurman
- Leonard Quirino
- Normand Berlin
- Copyright
