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Affiliation(s)

University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, Shanghai, China

ABSTRACT

In one of Tennessee Williams’s most well-known dramas, The Glass Menagerie, he portrays us with a sad family. From the existentialist point of view, this paper interprets the survival dilemma and free choice faced by the four Wingfield families in the play. While inspiring people to think and explore their own life meaning and survival choice, it also tries to reveal Tennessee Williams’ humanistic concern for the helpless and depressed living state of people in modern society.

KEYWORDS

existentialism,The Glass Menagerie, survival dilemma, free choice

Cite this paper

CHANG Shujun, Interpretation of the Characters in The Glass Menagerie From the Perspective of Existentialism, US-China Foreign Language, November 2024, Vol. 22, No. 11, 606-611 doi:10.17265/1539-8080/2024.11.007

References

Albert, C. (1989). The stranger. (M. Ward, Trans.). New York: Vintage Books. (Original work published in 1942)

Donald, S. (1985). The kindness of strangers: The life of Tennessee Williams. Toronto: Little Brown Company.

Dong, X. (2001). Freedom, alienation, and values: The exploration of humanism in Sartre’s existential philosophy view. Exploration, 32(5), 67-70.

Harold, B. (2006). Tennessee WilliamsThe glass menagerie. New York: Chelsea House Publishers.

Jean, P. S. (1993). Being and nothingness. (H. Barnes, Trans.). New York: Washington Square Press. (Original work published in 1943)

Murphy, B. (2005). Tennessee Williams in a companion to twentieth-century American drama. Oxford: Blackwell Pub.

Tennessee, W. (1999). The glass menagerie. London: Penguin Classics.

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