Men in Streetcar and Color Purple
- Created by: LamisaAmber
- Created on: 08-05-17 10:22
View mindmap
- Representationof Men
- The Color Purple
- Men as dominant
- Alphonso
- 'Then he push his thing inside my *****. When that hurt, I cry’
- ‘He beat me for dressing trampy but he do it to me anyway'
- Albert
- 'He git up on you, heist your nightgown round your waist, plunge in. […] Just do his business’
- 'Wives is like children'
- Alphonso
- Men who don't conform
- Harpo
- 'You ever hit her? Mr. ast. Harpo look down at his hands. Naw suh, he say low, embarrass'
- 'He love cooking and cleaning'
- Harpo
- Men who change
- Harpo
- No longer tries to make Sofia subservient
- Albert
- ‘You use to remind me of a bird […] just too big a fool to let myself care'
- He ain't Shug, but he begin to be somebody I can talk to'
- Harpo
- Men as dominant
- A Streetcar Named Desire
- Men as dominant
- Stanley
- 'She backs out of sight. He advances and disappears. There is the sound of a blow. Stella cries out.'
- 'We've had this date with each other from the beginning" - feels entitled to her body
- And when he comes back I cry on his lap like a baby…'
- 'accepts with lordly composure’
- Mitch
- Holds the power of shelter and money over her - can decide whether or not he wants to marry her
- Well, he’s not going to marry her. Maybe he was, but he’s not going to jump into a tank with a school of sharks – now!
- Stanley
- Men who don't conform
- Alan
- ‘There was something different about that boy, a softness, a tenderness’
- 'Degenerate'
- 'You disgust me'
- Alan
- 'Masculinity'
- Stanley
- Idea of Toxic Masculinity - to be masculine is to be aggressive and primitive in Streetcar
- animal thing, you!
- bearing the raw meat home from the kill in the jungle’'
- ‘gaudy seed-bearer’
- Stanley
- Men as dominant
- Context
- Color Purple - set in Southern USA 1920s-1950s. Patriarchal society, like that of Streetcar. Ideas of 'masculinity' embody physical strength and dominance over women.
- Streetcar - set in 1950s New Orleans. Patriarchal society in which men maintain economic and social control over women - perhaps explains Stanley's sense of higher status
- Conclusion
- Both authors present men and their actions as driven by the patriarchal ideals and the power which society affords them over women..
- However, where Williams presents a critique of a static society which is unable to accept non-conformity, Walker portrays a more idealistic view - men in TCP are able to repent and reform.
- The Color Purple
Similar English Literature resources:
Teacher recommended
Comments
No comments have yet been made