Friday, February 12, 2010

Open Prompt #2: The Glass Menagerie

Prompt 2: Choose a character in a novel or play of your choice (from the AP List!) and write about the conflict(s) that arise since they are in conflict with the society they are from. This may be socially, religiously, and/or morally. Dig deep! You should also address whether your character comes to a good/bad fate due to this conflict(s).

A shatter of glass and a young woman's fragile world leads to the downfall of an already sensitive universe in Tennessee William's "The Glass Menagerie." Tom Wingfield, frustrated with a life of repetitive motion and static, grows more and more impatient with his disillusioned mother and his sheltered sister. Set during the Great Depression, "The Glass Menagerie" offers insight into the world of a typical struggling family; a father who abandoned them, a mother who longs for the past and two unsatisfied children unable to do anything to save them from their fate.

Amanda Wingfield, the matriarch of the Wingfield family, grew up as a Southern belle. Throughout most of the play, she talks about her popularity with the 'gentlemen callers,' many of which would stop by her house, chat and give flowers. She talks about how she could have picked any gentleman and lived a rich life, but always ends her reminiscence with "your father had a way with words." Amanda's obssession with the past has an incredible effect on the end of the play.

Amanda also wheedles her daughter, the fragile Laura Wingfield, into wearing "Gay Deceivers," to impress her on gentleman caller. One extraordinary thing that Amanda thinks is that after Laura's first one, there will be an influx of gentlemen callers coming to take them both away and to take care of them for the rest of their lives. Laura, however, wants nothing to do with the world outside her front door, preferring the company of her glass menagerie instead of other humans. Amanda's need to 'polish' up the truth shows one of the complexities of her character--the fact that Amanda believes that what is natural is undesirable and that blemishes cannot be accepted. However, her opinion is juxtaposed with Laura's personality-- Laura, who has a limp, is believed to be crippled because Amanda said it was. Tom notes that Laura is not actually a cripple, but that she is abused and belittled into believing she was crippled so Amanda can continue to tell her stories of the gentlemen callers in the South.

Though not in conflict with society as a whole, Amanda Wingfield is in conflict with herself and her two children (the only society there really is during the Great Depression). Amanda's inability to let go of the past and her tendancy to live within it is a great factor in her conflict with society--Tom and Laura are not only tired of hearing the same things over and over again, but they also feel more hopeless just listening to it. Amanda's life seemed so easy before she married, which is a cruel way to treat them, considering all the hardships and trials they go through. Amanda's personality, which includes the fact that she needs to lie to make things seem better, is also a driving factor to causing Tom to run away. Ultimately, Amanda's micromanagement and inability to create boundaries for herself brings her to a negative end, causing her only son to leave (just as the father had left) and for Laura Wingfield to blow out her candles alone.

8 comments:

  1. I liked the intro =] It caught my interest and attention of the story. I got a little confused in the meat of the prompt, but caught on afterward. Loved the word choice, like: juxtaposed, micromanagement, wheedles, etc.

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  2. Farah,
    Good opening paragraph - it's an clear, concise summary of how dysfunctional the Wingfields are. The body paragraphs stay on-topic and it wraps up nicely.
    Though you make it clear in the second paragraph that the paper's about Amanda, the intro needs to sound a little less like the paper is about Tom. Just something minor.

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  3. I really like your intro paragraph and how you started off dramatic to keep the reader's interest

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  4. Hey Farrah,

    Nice intro paragraph...I liked how you were able to show evidence of conflict throughout your essay, even when you were giving your summary. You didn't lose sight of the prompt and it was very really interesting to read.

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  5. So I really liked this essay even though I hated the play. Your intro paragraph was captivating and it actually convinced me to read the rest of the essay :)
    Seriously though, you do a great job at answering the prompt and keeping focused. Good job :)

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  6. I tried to read this play but i couldn't get through it.
    Anyway, very good essay :)
    I really like your introduction. It was really strong and grabs the reader.
    Excellent!
    -Chelsea

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  7. I really liked how you made your essay have so much drama in it (haha funny because it's a play) and I liked it how you picked a controversy between so few people as opposed to being with society as a whole. My only problem with it, was that I think you needed to mention earlier in the essay that the conflict was between Amanda and her kids, because you conclude with that, but it should have been mentioned somewhere within the first two paragraphs. But other than that, it was really good!

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  8. Farah,
    I really enjoyed readng your essay.
    Like everyone else, your intro was really good.
    I love the way you write. very eloquent :)
    I never read or heard about this play but your essay supported your idea with good examples that still show what the book is about.

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