Critical (Lens) Perspectives The Glass Menagerie
Critical (Lens) Perspectives The Glass Menagerie
Critical (Lens) Perspectives The Glass Menagerie
Perspectives
Elizabeth Osborne
Multiple Critical
Perspectives The Glass Menagerie
T he Glass Menagerie premiered in Chicago in 1944 and in New York in 1945. It was an immediate
critical success, winning a New York Drama Circle award and establishing its creator as an important
playwright.
Tennessee Williams (1911 1983) drew upon his own life for some of the details in The Glass Menagerie
(which was actually a reworking of an earlier short story called Portrait of a Girl in Glass). Williams had a
sister, Rose, who was mentally troubled and eventually underwent a lobotomy. The procedure destroyed her
mind. The difference between sensitive people who thrive and sensitive people who do not, Williams came
to believe, comes down to whether a person can use art to cope with his or her pain.
Art as a tool for controlling and reshaping mental pain is therefore an important theme in The Glass
Menagerie. The protagonist and narrator, Tom Wingfield, is a would-be poet who works in a shoe factory
to support his mother and sister; books and writing are his only way to avoid insanity. His battles with his
mother over how he uses his mind and spends his life eventually compel him to run away.
Also important to The Glass Menagerie are the historical and social details of life in the late 1930s.
The play is set in 1937 in St. Louis, Missouri; the events that will soon cause World War II are occurring,
but people in St. Louis are mostly unaware of them.
Of course, Williams, who wrote Portrait of a Girl in Glass in the early 1940s, then reworked the
material into The Glass Menagerie soon afterwards, knew about the war. The characters matriculation in
a school for the blind is a deliberate device on his part. Only Tom, who is both narrator and character,
living in the present and the past, is aware of what will happen.
The Glass Menagerie was an early example of a new kind of playone that examined psychological
patterns and family relationships through impressionistic, sometimes stream-of-consciousness,
presentation. In fact, Williams calls The Glass Menagerie a memory play because of its dramatic
presentation of the memories and impressions of the protagonist, Tom. Just as in memories, some details
are exaggerated and some are left out. Arthur Millers Death of a Salesman (1949) would take a similar
approach.
The Glass Menagerie was adapted for film and television several times; one of the most popular is a
1973 version with Katherine Hepburn and Sam Waterston. High schools and small repertory theaters also
choose to stage the play because it requires only a single, interior set; minimal props; and few actors.
6 P r e s t w i c k H o u s e , I n c .
The Glass Menagerie
Multiple Critical
Perspectives
Psychoanalytic Theory
Applied to The Glass Menagerie
P r e s t w i c k H o u s e , I n c . 13
The Glass Menagerie
Multiple Critical
Perspectives
Activity One
1. Copy and distribute the handout: Oedipal Aspects of The Glass Menagerie.
3. Have students work in pairs or individually. Each pair or individual will answer the questions on the
handout.
4. Reconvene the class and use the following questions to start a class discussion:
What role does Jim play in the Oedipal structure of the play?
Discuss his relationship to each of the Wingfields, including Mr. Wingfield.
P r e s t w i c k H o u s e , I n c . 17
The Glass Menagerie
Multiple Critical
Perspectives
P r e s t w i c k H o u s e , I n c . 29
The Glass Menagerie
Multiple Critical
Perspectives
Activity One
1. Copy and distribute the handout: Examining Love, Courtship, and Marriage in The Glass Menagerie.
3. Assign to each group, or allow each to choose, one of the characters in The Glass Menagerie:
Tom
Amanda
Laura
Jim
4. Have each group discuss its characters scenes and then provide the requested information in the
chart.
5. Reconvene the class and have each group present its findings.
6. As a class, compose possible one-sentence thesis statements that express the plays assumptions about
the role of the woman in love, courtship, and marriage in The Glass Menagerie.
NOTE: Students do not need to agree, or even come to consensus. Your class may draft as many potential thesis
statements as occur to the class.
NOTE: As an additional activity, you may want to assign one or more of these thesis statements as a writing
assignment.
P r e s t w i c k H o u s e , I n c . 33
The Glass Menagerie
Multiple Critical
Perspectives
economic power
materialism versus spirituality
class conflict
art, literature, and ideologies
P r e s t w i c k H o u s e , I n c . 41
The Glass Menagerie
Multiple Critical
Perspectives
Activity One
1. Copy and distribute the handout: Historical Background of The Glass Menagerie.
2. As a class, reexamine the section of the Marxist approach on the importance of labor.
3. Divide the class into four groups or a number of groups divisible by four.
4. Assign to each group, or allow each to choose, one of the following topics:
5. Reconvene the class and have each group report its findings to the class.
Beyond merely establishing atmosphere and background, why do you suppose Williams set his
play against such a turbulent backdrop? (Remember the play is set in 1937, but it was written in
1943 1944.)
What does the background have to do with the lives of the characters?
What does the background contribute to the overall theme or meaning of the play?
In establishing the backdrop, why does he choose specifically the events and movements he does?
Does Williams seem to take a Marxist view of history? If so, what other evidence of this view can
you find in the play?
P r e s t w i c k H o u s e , I n c . 45