English Literature 9695

By zaynnie_xo

3K 69 6

This is a compilation of all the essays and notes I wrote while I was in ALevels. It must be noted that not a... More

Frost as a Modern Poet
Death And Afterlife-Frost
Frost's Philosophy of Choices
'Out,Out-' by Robert Frost
Frost's thoughts on Death
Frost's Exhibition of Sound of Sense
Robert Frost: Theme of Loss
Frost's Tone
Frost and Nature
Frost's Presentation of Men and Women
The Namesake: Gogol
Robert Frost and Jhumpa Lahiri
'The Namesake' by Jhumpa Lahiri Themes
'The Namesake' Opening
Northanger Abbey: Catherine
Northanger Abbey: Minor Characters and their Importance
Northanger Abbey: Gothic Elements
Northnager Abbey: Reference to Context 1
Northanger Abbey: Opening
Review of Characters in Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen
'Northanger Abbey' by Jane Austen at a glance
Northanger Abbey: Mrs Allen
Northanger Abbey: Isabella Thorpe
Northanger Abbey: Title
Philadelphia Here I Come!: Gar Public (R&P)
Philadelphia Here I Come!: Gar Public (R&F)
Philadelphia Here I Come!: Ending
Philadelphia Here I Come!: Kate Doogan
Philadelphia Here I Come!: Reference to Context
Review of Themes in 'Philadelphia Here I Come' by Brian Friel.
Sweet Bird of Youth: Men, Women and Relationships Between Them
Sweet Bird of Youth: Clinging to the Past
Sweet Bird of Youth: Social and Political Milieu
Sweet Bird of Youth: Title
The Winter's Tale: Sicilia and Bohemia
The Winter's Tale: Seasons
The Winter's Tale: Reference to Context
The Winter's Tale: Importance of Hermione's Resurrection
The Winter's Tale: Reference to Context 2 (Opening, Important!)
The Winter's Tale: Presentation of Time
The Glass Menagerie: Amanda Wingfield
The Glass Menagerie: Human Need to Dream
The Glass Menagerie: Title
The Glass Menagerie: Tom as the Narrator
The Glass Menagerie: Tom as the Victim
The Glass Menagerie: The Strength of Presented Symbols
The Glass Menagerie: Laura Wingfield
The Glass Menagerie: Sentimentality and Tenderness
The Glass Menagerie: Reference to Context
The Glass Menagerie: A Modern Drama
Americanah: Relatability to Modern Readers
Americanah: Obinze's Mother
Americanah: Social and Political Issues
The Winter's Tale at a Glance
The Winter's Tale: Themes and Further Reading
The Glass Menagerie Notes
Americanah Notes

Sweet Bird of Youth: Heavenly

24 1 0
By zaynnie_xo

Q. Discuss the Role and Function of Heavenly.

Tennessee Williams is a daring playwright. He explores issues rarely talked about during his time. Issues that people often shy away from. So, when he presented 'Sweet Bird of Youth' it was received with mixed feelings. This play reflects the society of his time that was perhaps filled with racism, sexism and hypocrisy. These reflections are illustrated through the characters in this play, one of them being Heavenly.

Williams first introduces Heavenly to his audience through Chance's mention of her in his conversation with Scudder. He is shown to refer to her as 'his girl' which confuses the audience who know he has another girl with him in the room that was clearly not Heavenly. Later when she is introduced to the audience we see that she is a beautiful, graceful woman and is considered by her father as a symbol of purity but ironically she is infected by a disease portrayed to have been transferred to her through Chance. Her character brings attention to hypocrisy that is perhaps evident throughout the play and perceives how youth is negatively affected due to the decisions of the elders. This is shown through her conversation with Boss, she is shown to talk of how if Boss had not kept her from marrying Chance she would not have been diseased and her youth would perhaps not have been taken away from her.

Compared to Heavenly, Williams has portrayed Alexandra as a stronger character. Unlike Heavenly she is allowed to decide her own destiny. She is shown to follow her dreams and achieve her goals by the end of the novel while poor Heavenly is presented to be rejected allowance to marry whom she wants in exchange for the power her father thirsts for. Chance and Heavenly are illustrated in a similar light, they both love each other but they are separated by cast difference and a hypocritical, harsh society. Neither of them get a happy ending, Chance gets castrated while Heavenly, who is already shown to be infertile, is exposed and humiliated in public. They both are displayed as people who have lost their youth and have perhaps now run out of chances. Here it is perhaps determined that gender does not play as large of a role in one's life as the society one grows up in does. Heavenly and Alexandra are both women yet with different lives as they grew up in contrasting cultures, meanwhile Chance is a male, born in a male dominant society and yet due to his social standing he is perhaps not considered an equal by the men in this play but rather like a pest that needs to be terminated.

The first detail the audience notice about Heavenly is perhaps how her character is not portrayed as a strong one. Williams has perhaps just used her as a stepping stone to keep the play in motion and has perhaps presented her solely as a symbolic figure. Due to this we do not get to see much development in Heavenly's character, instead we witness how she is used and humiliated from the beginning of the play till the end and even when she is shown to revolt she is met by threats towards Chance's life and is forced to oblige to her father in order to save Chance. Perhaps the only development one can see is how she went from a happy youthful girl to a lifeless unhappy woman. Yet, her feelings for Chance are perhaps throughout the play the same as they were during their youth.

Williams has represented Heavenly as a symbol of faded youth, and the irony of a 'heaven' created by the upper-class people where only those who they deem pure are allowed to entire. Meanwhile this heaven rots inside, being full of impurities, such as corruption, that are produced by the very people living in it. She symbolises the shattered dreams of youth considering the hopes she and Chance had of having a future together were crushed by the society. Heavenly and Boss's relationship represents the upperclass who decide who their children marry on the bases of wealth, class and benefit ignoring their feelings and thus leading towards broken relationships and emotionally broken people. It brings the audience's attention towards the unfairness of society and the true nature of those having power over the media and the public as Williams has presented the characters in such a way that perhaps the audience either sympathise with them or condemn their actions; either way the audience is allowed to dwell over this message and take in account the responsibility of ones actions.

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