Violence in Tennessee Williams' A streetcar named Desire
/ Vénérand Habarugira ; Eric Njeng Sipyinyu, supervisor
. - Bujumbura : University of Burundi , Faculty of arts and social sciences, 2014
. - IV-76 f ; 30 cm.
A dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of the degree: "Licence en Langue et Littérature Anglaises"
Résumé
This work entitled "Violence in Tennessee William' A Streetcar Named Desire" is written with the aim of examining violence in Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire. Tennesse Williams is among American writers who bring out a tragis era of American history.
Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire is a clear presentation of the social reality of a bourgeois family life in the American south.
This work is built on the hypothetical contention that characters are immersed in violence and suffer both physically and psychically. Psychoanalysis as a literary approach centers the discussion and it helps to situate this study in the characters' state of mind.