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The Role of Sexuality in the Major Plays of Tennessee Williams

by Senata K. Bauer-Briski (Author)
©2002 Thesis 388 Pages

Summary

Tennessee Williams, one of the leading American playwrights of the 20th century, has often been called the ‘national poet of the perverse’. Being a highly sexually active man all his life, he enjoyed writing sex into his plays and considered it beautiful. It is therefore perhaps surprising that the role sexuality plays in his dramatic work has never been researched in detail.
This thesis is the first profound study of how sexuality – either overt or covert – affects and dominates Tennessee Williams’ dramatic work. Analyzing eight major plays in detail, this study explores how the characters’ lived or suppressed (deviating) sexual inclinations and preferences affect their psychological state, their behavior and their relationships with the other characters in the plays. It further demonstrates how sexuality motivates each play in the first place, dominates its plot and finally how the characters’ ability to deal with their sexuality leads to either a conciliatory or a fatal, sometimes even a lethal ending. The book points out parallels and differences between the plays as well as Williams’ development of sexuality in his drama.

Details

Pages
388
Year
2002
ISBN (Softcover)
9783906767970
Language
English
Keywords
sexual inclinations relationships behavior
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Oxford, Wien, 2002. 388 pp.

Biographical notes

Senata K. Bauer-Briski (Author)

The Author: Senata K. Bauer-Briski, born in 1967, studied English and German language and literature at Zurich University and completed her doctorate in 2001. She is currently teaching English and German.

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Title: The Role of Sexuality in the Major Plays of Tennessee Williams